Saturday, 24 November 2018
2100 Frank Owen
Constituency : Hereford 1929-31
Frank took Hereford from the Tories in a three-cornered contest despite only being selected at the last minute. He was the youngest MP at 23.
Frank was the son of an innkeeper from Hereford. He was educated at Monmouth School and Cambridge. He was a journalist for the South Wales Argus. He volunteered at Liberal party HQ to help with election propaganda in 1929 and found himself a candidate.
Frank only asked a couple of questions in Parliament.
In 1931, Frank stayed loyal to Lloyd George. He was the only one of the so-called "family group" who was not related to Lloyd George and the only one to be defeated despite Labour standing aside.
Frank went to work for the Daily Express then in 1938 became editor of the Evening Standard. He was a ferocious opponent of appeasement and printed extracts from Mein Kampf to make his point. He was a co-author of the anti-appeasement tract Guilty Men in 1940. The following year he published The Three Dictators : Mussolini, Stalin, Hitler.
In World War Two Frank served in the Royal Tank Regiment then went to South East Asia to edit the forces newspaper under Lord Mountbatten. He was raised to Lieutenant-Colonel and awarded the OBE. His successor at the Evening Standard was Michael Foot.
In 1947, Frank became editor of the Daily Mail.
In 1954 , Frank wrote a sympathetic biography of Lloyd George which seems to have inspired him to resume a political career. He stood for Hereford again in 1955 and pushed Labour into third place. In 1956 there was a by-election and Frank was able to significantly close the gap on the Tories.
Frank sent a telegram to Gwilym Lloyd-George to try and prevent the execution of Ruth Ellis.
He died in 1979 aged 73.
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