Sunday, 25 November 2018
2101 Geoffrey Mander
Constituency : Wolverhampton East 1929-45
Geoffrey took over from George Thorne at Wolverhampton East. He won easily in a three cornered contest.
Geoffrey's family were prominent industrialists in the Midlands. He was educated at Harrow and Cambridge and became a barrister. He served in the Royal Flying Corps in World War One. He was chairman of Mander Brothers making paints and varnishes on an international scale. He was a Congregationalist. He was a borough councillor from 1911 to 1920. He stood for Leominster in 1922 running the Tory close then Cannock, a Labour seat in 1923 where he came third. He came third again at Stourbridge in 1924.
Geoffrey voted for Labour's Coal Bill in 1929. He became the party's foreign affairs expert. He was also a respected authority on industrial relations.
In 1931, Geoffrey agreed to a 40 hour week with Ernest Bevin, making his company the first to introduce it in Britain.
Geoffrey supported the League of Nations but was a strong opponent of appeasement. He fiercely criticised the Peace pledge Union in 1936. Mussiolini called for a boycott of his firm's goods in 1938. He was also on Hitler's extermination list.
Geoffrey was a determined questioner. Baldwin once said he would "tread honestly and conscientiously on every corn from China to Peru". The journalist Percy Cater said of him, "he is a sort of pocket edition of noble indignation. See him pouncing up to ask a question. There you see fire, purpose, an inextinguishable soul".
Geoffrey was PPS to Archibald Sinclair during the war. In 1941 he published the valedictory We Were Not All Wrong.
Geoffrey held his seat with a reduced majority in 1931 and more comfortably in 1935 but was swept away by Labour in 1945. He was knighted shortly afterwards.
Geoffrey himself joined labour in 1948 and was a Staffordshire county councillor for them.
Geoffrey was an arts patron and conservationist and was the first person to donate the family home to the National Trust during their lifetime. His wife Rosaline was a literary biographer.
He died in 1962 aged 80.
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