List of MPs elected in the 1935 United Kingdom general election
This is a list of members of Parliament elected at the 1935 general election, held on 14 November. Due to the onset of the Second World War, this was the last general election before 1945, making it the longest UK parliament in history and the longest parliament to sit in Westminster since the Cavalier Parliament of 1661–1679.
History
[edit]- A declaration was made to Parliament 3 September 1939[1] by PM Neville Chamberlain that "this country is at war with Germany", as it had been since 9am that day upon the expiration of an unobserved deadline to cease German fire in Poland.
- The King commissioned a change in Administration on 10 May 1940, and Winston Churchill became Prime Minister on 13 May 1940 with a resolution "That this House welcomes the formation of a Government representing the united and inflexible resolve of the nation to prosecute the war with Germany to a victorious conclusion."[2]
- On 29 January 1942, Clement Attlee's motion was voted, "That this House has confidence in His Majesty's Government and will aid it to the utmost in the vigorous prosecution of the War", and passed by a margin of 464 Ayes to 1 Noe (Maxton, J.).[3]
- A motion to censure the Government of Churchill, "That this House, while paying tribute to the heroism and endurance of the Armed Forces of the Crown in circumstances of exceptional difficulty, has no confidence in the central direction of the war," was defeated on 2 July 1942 by a count of 475 Noes to 25 Ayes. Sir John Wardlaw-Milne was mover, and Mr. Aneurin Bevan was seconder.[4]
Composition
[edit]This diagram show the composition of the parties in the 1935 general election.
Note: This is not the official seating plan of the House of Commons, which has five rows of benches on each side, with the government party to the right of the speaker and opposition parties to the left, but with room for only around two-thirds of MPs to sit at any one time. The Commons Chamber was hit by bombs and the roof of Westminster Hall was set on fire. The fire service said that it would be impossible to save both, so it was decided to concentrate on saving the Hall. The Commons Chamber was entirely destroyed by the fire which spread to the Members' Lobby and caused the ceiling to collapse. By the following morning, all that was left of the Chamber was a smoking shell. As the Commons Chamber was totally destroyed and the Lords Chamber was damaged, both Houses moved to the Church House annexe and sat there from 13 May. From late June 1941 until October 1950, the Commons met in the Lords Chamber, while the Lords met in the Robing Room (a fact which was kept secret during the war).[5]
A[edit] | ||
Constituency | MP | Party |
---|---|---|
Aberavon | William Cove | Labour |
Aberdare | George Hall | Labour |
Aberdeen North | George Garro-Jones | Labour |
Aberdeen South | Sir Douglas Thomson, Bt | Conservative |
Aberdeenshire Central | Sir Robert Smith | Conservative |
Aberdeenshire East | Robert Boothby | Conservative |
Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine | Malcolm Barclay-Harvey | Conservative |
Abertillery | George Daggar | Labour |
Abingdon | Sir Ralph Glyn, Bt | Conservative |
Accrington | Henry Procter | Conservative |
Acton | Hubert Duggan | Conservative |
Aldershot | Roundell Palmer | Conservative |
Altrincham | Sir Edward Grigg | Conservative |
Anglesey | Megan Lloyd George | Independent Liberal |
Antrim (two members) |
Hon. Sir Hugh O'Neill | Ulster Unionist |
Sir Joseph McConnell, Bt | Ulster Unionist | |
Argyllshire | Frederick Macquisten | Conservative |
Armagh | Sir William Allen | Ulster Unionist |
Ashford | Patrick Spens | Conservative |
Ashton-under-Lyne | Fred Simpson | Labour |
Aylesbury | Michael Beaumont | Conservative |
Ayr Burghs | Thomas Moore | Conservative |
Ayrshire North and Bute | Sir Charles MacAndrew | Conservative |
Ayrshire South | The Rt Hon. James Brown | Labour |
B[edit] | ||
Balham and Tooting | Sir Alfred Butt, Bt | Conservative |
Banbury | Sir Albert Edmondson | Conservative |
Banffshire | Sir John Findlay, Bt | Conservative |
Barkston Ash | Leonard Ropner | Conservative |
Barnard Castle | Thomas Sexton | Labour |
Barnsley | John Potts | Labour |
Barnstaple | Richard Acland | Liberal |
Barrow-in-Furness | Sir Jonah Walker-Smith | Conservative |
Basingstoke | Patrick Donner | Conservative |
Bassetlaw | Frederick Bellenger | Labour |
Bath | Loel Guinness | Conservative |
Batley and Morley | Willie Brooke | Labour |
Battersea North | William Sanders | Labour |
Battersea South | Harry Selley | Conservative |
Bedford | Richard Wells | Conservative |
Bedfordshire Mid | Alan Lennox-Boyd | Conservative |
Bedwellty | Charles Edwards | Labour |
Belfast, East | Herbert Dixon | Ulster Unionist |
Belfast, North | Thomas Somerset | Ulster Unionist |
Belfast, South | William Stewart | Ulster Unionist |
Belfast, West | Alexander Browne | Ulster Unionist |
Belper | Herbert Wragg | Conservative |
Bermondsey West | Alfred Salter | Labour |
Berwick and Haddington | John McEwen | Conservative |
Berwick-on-Tweed | Sir Hugh Seely, Bt | Liberal |
Bethnal Green North-East | Dan Chater | Labour Co-op |
Bethnal Green South-West | Sir Percy Harris, Bt | Liberal |
Bewdley | The Rt Hon. Stanley Baldwin | Conservative |
Birkenhead East | Graham White | Liberal |
Birkenhead West | John Sandeman Allen | Conservative |
Birmingham Aston | Hon. Arthur Hope | Conservative |
Birmingham Deritend | Smedley Crooke | Conservative |
Birmingham Duddeston | Oliver Simmonds | Conservative |
Birmingham Edgbaston | Rt. Hon. Neville Chamberlain | Conservative |
Birmingham Erdington | John Eales | Conservative |
Birmingham Handsworth | Oliver Locker-Lampson | Conservative |
Birmingham King's Norton | Ronald Cartland | Conservative |
Birmingham Ladywood | Geoffrey Lloyd | Conservative |
Birmingham Moseley | Sir Patrick Hannon | Conservative |
Birmingham Sparkbrook | Rt. Hon. Leo Amery | Conservative |
Birmingham West | Rt. Hon. Sir Austen Chamberlain | Conservative |
Birmingham Yardley | Edward Salt | Conservative |
Bishop Auckland | Hugh Dalton | Labour |
Blackburn (two members) |
W. D. Smiles | Conservative |
George Elliston | Conservative | |
Blackpool | Roland Robinson | Conservative |
Blaydon | William Whiteley | Labour |
Bodmin | John Rathbone | Conservative |
Bolton (two members) |
Cyril Entwistle | Conservative |
Sir John Haslam | Conservative | |
Bootle | Eric Errington | Conservative |
Bosworth | William Edge | Liberal National |
Bothwell | James C. Welsh | Labour |
Bournemouth | Sir Henry Page Croft | Conservative |
Bow and Bromley | The Rt Hon. George Lansbury | Labour |
Bradford Central | William Leach | Labour |
Bradford East | Joseph Hepworth | Conservative |
Bradford North | Eugene Ramsden | Conservative |
Bradford South | Herbert Holdsworth | Liberal |
Brecon and Radnor | Hon. Ivor Guest | National |
Brentford and Chiswick | Harold Mitchell | Conservative |
Bridgwater | Reginald Croom-Johnson | Conservative |
Brigg | David Quibell | Labour |
Brighton (two members) |
Cooper Rawson | Conservative |
The Rt Hon. Sir George Tryon | Conservative | |
Bristol Central | Lord Apsley | Conservative |
Bristol East | Sir Stafford Cripps | Labour |
Bristol North | Robert Bernays | Liberal |
Bristol South | Alexander Walkden | Labour |
Bristol West | Cyril Thomas Culverwell | Conservative |
Brixton | Nigel Colman | Conservative |
Bromley | Sir Edward Campbell | Conservative |
Broxtowe | Seymour Cocks | Labour |
Buckingham | Sir George Bowyer, Bt | Conservative |
Buckrose | Albert Braithwaite | Conservative |
Burnley | Wilfrid Burke | Labour |
Burslem | Andrew McLaren | Labour |
Burton | The Rt Hon. John Gretton | Conservative |
Bury | Alan Chorlton | Conservative |
Bury St Edmunds | Frank Heilgers | Conservative |
C[edit] | ||
Caerphilly | Morgan Jones | Labour |
Caithness and Sutherland | The Rt Hon. Sir Archibald Sinclair, Bt | Liberal |
Camberwell North | Charles Ammon | Labour |
Camberwell North West | Hon. Oscar Guest | Conservative |
Camborne | Peter Agnew | Conservative |
Cambridge | Richard Tufnell | Conservative |
Cambridgeshire | Richard Briscoe | Conservative |
Cambridge University (two members) |
Sir John Withers | Conservative |
Kenneth Pickthorn | Conservative | |
Cannock | William Adamson | Labour |
Canterbury | Sir William Wayland | Conservative |
Cardiff Central | Sir Ernest Bennett | National Labour |
Cardiff East | Owen Temple-Morris | Conservative |
Cardiff South | Arthur Evans | Conservative |
Cardiganshire | Owen Evans | Liberal |
Carlisle | Louis Spears | Conservative |
Carmarthen | Daniel Hopkin | Labour |
Carnarvon Boroughs | The Rt Hon. David Lloyd George | Independent Liberal |
Carnarvonshire | Goronwy Owen | Independent Liberal |
Chatham | Leonard Plugge | Conservative |
Chelmsford | John Macnamara | Conservative |
Chelsea | Rt. Hon. Sir Samuel Hoare, Bt | Conservative |
Cheltenham | Sir Walter Preston | Conservative |
Chertsey | Sir Archibald Boyd-Carpenter | Conservative |
City of Chester | Sir Charles Cayzer, Bt | Conservative |
Chesterfield | George Benson | Labour |
Chester-le-Street | Jack Lawson | Labour |
Chichester | John Courtauld | Conservative |
Chippenham | Victor Cazalet | Conservative |
Chislehurst | Sir Waldron Smithers | Conservative |
Chorley | The Rt Hon. Sir Douglas Hacking | Conservative |
Cirencester and Tewkesbury | William Morrison | Conservative |
City of London (two members) |
Sir Alan Anderson | Conservative |
Sir Vansittart Bowater, Bt | Conservative | |
Clapham | Sir John Leigh, Bt | Conservative |
Clay Cross | Alfred Holland | Labour |
Cleveland | Robert Bower | Conservative |
Clitheroe | Sir William Brass | Conservative |
Coatbridge | James Barr | Labour |
Colchester | Oswald Lewis | Conservative |
Colne Valley | Ernest Marklew | Labour |
Combined English Universities (two members) |
Eleanor Rathbone | Independent |
Sir Reginald Craddock | Conservative | |
Combined Scottish Universities (Three members) |
John Graham Kerr | Conservative |
George Morrison | Liberal National | |
Noel Skelton | Conservative | |
Cornwall North | Rt Hon. Sir Francis Dyke Acland, Bt | Liberal |
Consett | David Adams | Labour |
Coventry | William Strickland | Conservative |
Crewe | Sir Donald Somervell | Conservative |
Croydon North | Hon. Glyn Mason | Conservative |
Croydon South | Herbert Williams | Conservative |
Cumberland North | Wilfrid Roberts | Liberal |
D[edit] | ||
Darlington | Charles Peat | Conservative |
Dartford | Frank Clarke | Conservative |
Darwen | Stuart Russell | Conservative |
Daventry | The Rt Hon. Edward FitzRoy | Speaker (Conservative) |
Denbigh | Sir Henry Morris-Jones | Liberal National |
Deptford | Walter Green | Labour Co-op |
Derby (two members) |
Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas | National Labour |
William Allan Reid | Conservative | |
Derbyshire North East | Frank Lee | Labour |
Derbyshire South | Paul Emrys-Evans | Conservative |
Derbyshire West | The Marquess of Hartington | Conservative |
Devizes | Sir Percy Hurd | Conservative |
Dewsbury | Benjamin Riley | Labour |
Doncaster | Alfred Short | Labour |
Don Valley | Tom Williams | Labour |
Dorset East | Gordon Hall Caine | Conservative |
Dorset North | Sir Cecil Hanbury | Conservative |
Dorset, South | Viscount Cranborne | Conservative |
Dorset West | Philip Colfox | Conservative |
Dover | Hon. John Astor | Conservative |
Down (two members) |
Sir David Reid | Ulster Unionist |
Viscount Castlereagh | Ulster Unionist | |
Dudley | Dudley Joel | Conservative |
Dulwich | Bracewell Smith | Conservative |
Dumbarton Burghs | David Kirkwood | Labour |
Dumfriesshire | Sir Henry Fildes | Liberal National |
Dunbartonshire | Hon. Archibald Cochrane | Conservative |
Dundee (two members) |
Dingle Foot | Liberal |
Florence Horsbrugh | Conservative | |
Dunfermline Burghs | William McLean Watson | Labour |
Durham | Joshua Ritson | Labour |
E[edit] | ||
Ealing | Sir Frank Sanderson, Bt | Conservative |
Eastbourne | Charles Taylor | Conservative |
East Grinstead | Sir Henry Cautley, Bt | Conservative |
East Ham North | John Mayhew | Conservative |
East Ham South | Alfred Barnes | Labour Co-op |
Ebbw Vale | Aneurin Bevan | Labour |
Eccles | Robert Cary | Conservative |
Eddisbury | R. J. Russell | Liberal National |
Edinburgh Central | James Guy | Conservative |
Edinburgh East | Frederick Pethick-Lawrence | Labour |
Edinburgh North | Alexander Erskine-Hill | Conservative |
Edinburgh South | Sir Samuel Chapman | Conservative |
Edinburgh West | Thomas Cooper | Conservative |
Edmonton | Francis Broad | Labour Co-op |
Elland | Thomas Levy | Conservative |
Enfield | Bartle Bull | Conservative |
Epping | The Rt Hon. Winston Churchill | Conservative |
Epsom | Archibald Southby | Conservative |
Essex South East | Victor Raikes | Conservative |
Evesham | Rupert de la Bere | Conservative |
Exeter | Arthur Reed | Conservative |
Eye | Edgar Granville | Liberal National |
F[edit] | ||
Fareham | The Rt Hon. Sir Thomas Inskip | Conservative |
Farnham | Sir Arthur Samuel, Bt | Conservative |
Farnworth | Guy Rowson | Labour |
Faversham | Adam Maitland | Conservative |
Fermanagh and Tyrone (two members) |
Patrick Cunningham | Irish Nationalist (Abstent.) |
Anthony Mulvey | Irish Nationalist (Abstent.) | |
Fife East | James Henderson-Stewart | Liberal National |
Fife West | Willie Gallacher | Communist |
Finchley | John Crowder | Conservative |
Finsbury | George Woods | Labour Co-op |
Flintshire | Gwilym Rowlands | Conservative |
Forest of Dean | M. Philips Price | Labour |
Forfarshire | William T. Shaw | Conservative |
Frome | Mavis Tate | Conservative |
Fulham East | Hon. William Astor | Conservative |
Fulham West | Sir Cyril Cobb | Conservative |
Fylde | The Rt Hon. Edward Stanley | Conservative |
G[edit] | ||
Gainsborough | Harry Crookshank | Conservative |
Galloway | John Mackie | Conservative |
Gateshead | Thomas Magnay | Liberal National |
Gillingham | Sir Robert Gower | Conservative |
Glasgow Bridgeton | James Maxton | Independent Labour Party |
Glasgow Camlachie | Campbell Stephen | Independent Labour Party |
Glasgow Cathcart | John Train | Conservative |
Glasgow Central | Sir William Alexander | Conservative |
Glasgow Gorbals | George Buchanan | Independent Labour Party |
Glasgow Govan | Neil Maclean | Labour |
Glasgow Hillhead | The Rt Hon. Sir Robert Horne | Conservative |
Glasgow Kelvingrove | The Rt Hon. Walter Elliot | Conservative |
Glasgow Maryhill | John James Davidson | Labour |
Glasgow Partick | Arthur Young | Conservative |
Glasgow Pollok | Rt. Hon. Sir John Gilmour, Bt | Conservative |
Glasgow St. Rollox | William Leonard | Labour Co-op |
Glasgow Shettleston | John McGovern | Independent Labour Party |
Glasgow Springburn | George Hardie | Labour |
Glasgow Tradeston | Tom Henderson | Labour Co-op |
Gloucester | Leslie Boyce | Conservative |
Gower | David Grenfell | Labour |
Grantham | Sir Victor Warrender, Bt | Conservative |
Gravesend | Sir Irving Albery | Conservative |
Great Yarmouth | Arthur Harbord | Liberal National |
Greenock | The Rt Hon. Sir Godfrey Collins | Liberal National |
Greenwich | Sir George Hume | Conservative |
Grimsby | Walter Womersley | Conservative |
Guildford | Sir John Jarvis, Bt | Conservative |
H[edit] | ||
Hackney Central | Fred Watkins | Labour |
Hackney North | Austin Hudson | Conservative |
Hackney South | The Rt Hon. Herbert Morrison | Labour |
Halifax | Gilbert Gledhill | Conservative |
Hamilton | Duncan Graham | Labour |
Hammersmith North | D. N. Pritt | Labour |
Hammersmith South | Douglas Cooke | Conservative |
Hampstead | George Balfour | Conservative |
Hanley | Arthur Hollins | Labour |
Harborough | Ronald Tree | Conservative |
Harrow | Sir Isidore Salmon | Conservative |
The Hartlepools | W. G. Howard Gritten | Conservative |
Harwich | Stanley Holmes | Liberal National |
Hastings | The Rt Hon. Eustace Percy | Conservative |
Hemel Hempstead | Rt Hon. J. C. C. Davidson | Conservative |
Hemsworth | George Griffiths | Labour |
Hendon | Sir Reginald Blair | Conservative |
Henley | Sir Gifford Fox, Bt | Conservative |
Hereford | James Thomas | Conservative |
Hertford | Sir Murray Sueter | Conservative |
Hexham | Douglas Clifton Brown | Conservative |
Heywood and Radcliffe | Richard Porritt | Conservative |
High Peak | Sir Alfred Law | Conservative |
Hitchin | Sir Arnold Wilson | Conservative |
Holborn | Sir Robert Tasker | Conservative |
Holderness | Sir Samuel Savery | Conservative |
Holland-with-Boston | Sir James Blindell | Liberal National |
Honiton | Cedric Drewe | Conservative |
Horncastle | Henry Haslam | Conservative |
Hornsey | Euan Wallace | Conservative |
Horsham and Worthing | The Earl Winterton PC | Conservative |
Houghton-le-Spring | William Stewart | Labour |
Howdenshire | William Carver | Conservative |
Huddersfield | William Mabane | Liberal National |
Huntingdonshire | Sidney Peters | Liberal National |
Hythe | The Rt Hon. Sir Philip Sassoon, Bt | Conservative |
I[edit] | ||
Ilford | Sir George Hamilton | Conservative |
Ilkeston | George Oliver | Labour |
Ince | Gordon Macdonald | Labour |
Inverness | Sir Murdoch Macdonald | Liberal National |
Ipswich | Sir John Ganzoni, Bt | Conservative |
Isle of Ely | James de Rothschild | Liberal |
Isle of Thanet | Harold Balfour | Conservative |
Isle of Wight | Peter Macdonald | Conservative |
Islington East | Thelma Cazalet-Keir | Conservative |
Islington North | Albert Goodman | Conservative |
Islington South | William Cluse | Labour |
Islington West | Frederick Montague | Labour |
J[edit] | ||
Jarrow | Ellen Wilkinson | Labour |
K[edit] | ||
Keighley | The Rt Hon. Hastings Lees-Smith | Labour |
Kennington | Sir George Harvey | Conservative |
Kensington North | James Duncan | Conservative |
Kensington South | Sir William Davison | Conservative |
Kettering | John Eastwood | Conservative |
Kidderminster | Sir John Wardlaw-Milne | Conservative |
Kilmarnock | Kenneth Lindsay | National Labour |
King's Lynn | Hon. Somerset Maxwell | Conservative |
Kingston upon Hull Central | Walter Windsor | Labour |
Kingston upon Hull East | George Muff | Labour |
Kingston upon Hull North West | Sir Lambert Ward, Bt | Conservative |
Kingston upon Hull South West | Richard Law | Conservative |
Kingston-upon-Thames | Sir Frederick Penny, Bt | Conservative |
Kingswinford | Arthur Henderson | Labour |
Kinross & West Perthshire | The Duchess of Atholl | Conservative |
Kirkcaldy District of Burghs | The Rt Hon. Tom Kennedy | Labour |
Knutsford | Sir Ernest Makins | Conservative |
L[edit] | ||
Lambeth North | George Strauss | Labour |
Lanark | Alec Douglas-Home | Conservative |
Lanarkshire North | William Anstruther-Gray | Conservative |
Lancaster | Herwald Ramsbotham | Conservative |
Leeds Central | Richard Denman | National Labour |
Leeds North | Osbert Peake | Conservative |
Leeds North East | Sir John Birchall | Conservative |
Leeds South | Henry Charleton | Labour |
Leeds South East | James Milner | Labour |
Leeds West | Vyvyan Adams | Conservative |
Leek | William Bromfield | Labour |
Leicester East | Abraham Lyons | Conservative |
Leicester South | Charles Waterhouse | Conservative |
Leicester West | Hon. Harold Nicolson | National Labour |
Leigh | Joe Tinker | Labour |
Leith | Rt Hon. Ernest Brown | Liberal National |
Leominster | Ernest Shepperson | Conservative |
Lewes | Hon. John Loder | Conservative |
Lewisham East | Sir Assheton Pownall | Conservative |
Lewisham West | Sir Philip Dawson | Conservative |
Leyton East | Sir Frederick Mills, Bt | Conservative |
Leyton West | Reginald Sorensen | Labour |
Lichfield | James Lovat-Fraser | National Labour |
Lincoln | Walter Liddall | Conservative |
Linlithgowshire | George Mathers | Labour |
Liverpool East Toxteth | Patrick Buchan-Hepburn | Conservative |
Liverpool Edge Hill | Alexander Critchley | Conservative |
Liverpool Everton | Bertie Kirby | Labour |
Liverpool Exchange | Sir John Shute | Conservative |
Liverpool Fairfield | Sir Edmund Brocklebank | Conservative |
Liverpool Kirkdale | Robert Rankin | Conservative |
Liverpool Scotland | David Logan | Labour |
Liverpool Walton | Reginald Purbrick | Conservative |
Liverpool Wavertree | Peter Stapleton Shaw | Conservative |
Liverpool West Derby | David Maxwell Fyfe | Conservative |
Liverpool West Toxteth | Joseph Gibbins | Labour |
Llandaff and Barry | Patrick Munro | Conservative |
Llanelli | John Henry Williams | Labour |
London University | Sir Ernest Graham-Little | National |
Londonderry | Sir Ronald Ross | Ulster Unionist |
Lonsdale | David Lindsay | Conservative |
Loughborough | Lawrence Kimball | Conservative |
Louth | Arthur Heneage | Conservative |
Lowestoft | Pierse Loftus | Conservative |
Ludlow | George Windsor-Clive | Conservative |
Luton | Leslie Burgin | Liberal National |
M[edit] | ||
Macclesfield | John Remer | Conservative |
Maidstone | Alfred Bossom | Conservative |
Maldon | Sir Edward Ruggles-Brise, Bt | Conservative |
Manchester Ardwick | Joseph Henderson | Labour |
Manchester Blackley | John Lees-Jones | Conservative |
Manchester Clayton | John Jagger | Labour |
Manchester Exchange | Peter Eckersley | Conservative |
Manchester Gorton | Joseph Compton | Labour |
Manchester Hulme | Joseph Nall | Conservative |
Manchester Moss Side | William Duckworth | Conservative |
Manchester Platting | Rt Hon. J. R. Clynes | Labour |
Manchester Rusholme | Edmund Radford | Conservative |
Manchester Withington | Edward Fleming | Conservative |
Mansfield | Charles Brown | Labour |
Melton | Lindsay Everard | Conservative |
Merioneth | Sir Henry Haydn Jones | Liberal |
Merthyr | S. O. Davies | Labour |
Middlesbrough East | Alfred Edwards | Labour |
Middlesbrough West | Frank Kingsley Griffith | Liberal |
Middleton and Prestwich | Sir Nairne Stewart Sandeman, Bt | Conservative |
Midlothian North | John Colville | Conservative |
Midlothian South and Peebles | Archibald Maule Ramsay | Conservative |
Mitcham | Sir Richard Meller | Conservative |
Monmouth | John Herbert | Conservative |
Montgomeryshire | Clement Davies | Liberal National |
Montrose | Charles Kerr | Liberal National |
Moray & Nairn | Hon. James Stuart | Conservative |
Morpeth | Robert Taylor | Labour |
Mossley | Austin Hopkinson | National |
Motherwell | James Walker | Labour |
N[edit] | ||
Neath | Sir William Jenkins | Labour |
Nelson and Colne | Sydney Silverman | Labour |
Newark | The Marquess of Titchfield | Conservative |
Newbury | Howard Clifton Brown | Conservative |
Newcastle-under-Lyme | Rt Hon. Josiah Wedgwood | Labour |
Newcastle-upon-Tyne Central | Alfred Denville | Conservative |
Newcastle-upon-Tyne East | Sir Robert Aske, Bt | Liberal National |
Newcastle-upon-Tyne North | Sir Nicholas Grattan-Doyle | Conservative |
Newcastle-upon-Tyne West | Sir Joseph Leech | Conservative |
New Forest and Christchurch | John Mills | Conservative |
Newport | Sir Reginald Clarry | Conservative |
Newton | Sir Robert Young | Labour |
Norfolk East | Viscount Elmley | Liberal National |
Norfolk North | Sir Thomas Cook | Conservative |
Norfolk South | James Christie | Conservative |
Norfolk South West | Somerset de Chair | Conservative |
Normanton | Tom Smith | Labour |
Northampton | Sir Mervyn Manningham-Buller, Bt | Conservative |
Northwich | Lord Colum Crichton-Stuart | Conservative |
Norwich (two members) |
Geoffrey Shakespeare | Liberal National |
Henry Strauss | Conservative | |
Norwood | Duncan Sandys | Conservative |
Nottingham Central | Sir Terence O'Connor | Conservative |
Nottingham East | Louis Gluckstein | Conservative |
Nottingham South | Frank Markham | National Labour |
Nottingham West | Arthur Hayday | Labour |
Nuneaton | Reginald Fletcher | Labour |
O[edit] | ||
Ogmore | Edward Williams | Labour |
Oldham (two members) |
John Dodd | Liberal National |
Hamilton Kerr | Conservative | |
Orkney and Shetland | Basil Neven-Spence | Conservative |
Ormskirk | Samuel Rosbotham | National Labour |
Oswestry | Bertie Leighton | Conservative |
Oxford | Rt Hon. Robert Bourne | Conservative |
Oxford University (two members) |
A. P. Herbert | Independent |
Rt Hon. Lord Hugh Cecil | Conservative | |
P[edit] | ||
Paddington North | Brendan Bracken | Conservative |
Paddington South | Ernest Taylor | Conservative |
Paisley | Hon. Joseph Maclay | Liberal |
Peckham | Viscount Borodale | Conservative |
Pembrokeshire | Gwilym Lloyd George | Independent Liberal |
Penistone | Henry McGhee | Labour |
Penrith and Cockermouth | Alan Gandar-Dower | Conservative |
Penryn and Falmouth | Maurice Petherick | Conservative |
Perth | Thomas Hunter | Conservative |
Peterborough | Lord Burghley | Conservative |
Petersfield | Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith | Conservative |
Plymouth Devonport | Rt Hon. Leslie Hore-Belisha | Liberal National |
Plymouth Drake | Rt Hon. Frederick Guest | Conservative |
Plymouth Sutton | Nancy Astor | Conservative |
Pontefract | Adam Hills | Labour |
Pontypool | Arthur Jenkins | Labour |
Pontypridd | David Lewis Davies | Labour |
Poplar South | David Morgan Adams | Labour |
Portsmouth Central | Hon. Ralph Beaumont | Conservative |
Portsmouth North | Sir Roger Keyes, Bt | Conservative |
Portsmouth South | Sir Herbert Cayzer, Bt | Conservative |
Preston (two members) |
William Kirkpatrick | Conservative |
Adrian Moreing | Conservative | |
Pudsey and Otley | Sir Granville Gibson | Conservative |
Putney | Marcus Samuel | Conservative |
Q[edit] | ||
Queen's University of Belfast | Thomas Sinclair | Ulster Unionist |
R[edit] | ||
Reading | Alfred Howitt | Conservative |
Reigate | Gordon Touche | Conservative |
Renfrewshire, East | Douglas Douglas-Hamilton | Conservative |
Renfrewshire, West | Henry Scrymgeour-Wedderburn | Conservative |
Rhondda East | William Mainwaring | Labour |
Rhondda West | William John | Labour |
Richmond (Yorks) | Thomas Dugdale | Conservative |
Richmond upon Thames | William Ray | Conservative |
Ripon | John Hills | Conservative |
Rochdale | William Kelly | Labour |
Romford | John Parker | Labour |
Ross and Cromarty | The Rt Hon. Sir Ian Macpherson, Bt | Liberal National |
Rossendale | Ronald Cross | Conservative |
Rotherham | William Dobbie | Labour |
Rotherhithe | Ben Smith | Labour |
Rother Valley | Edward Dunn | Labour |
Rothwell | William Lunn | Labour |
Roxburgh and Selkirk | Lord William Montagu-Douglas-Scott | Conservative |
Royton | Harold Sutcliffe | Conservative |
Rugby | Rt Hon. David Margesson | Conservative |
Rushcliffe | Ralph Assheton | Conservative |
Rutherglen | Allan Chapman | Conservative |
Rutland and Stamford | Lord Willoughby de Eresby | Conservative |
Rye | Sir George Courthope, Bt | Conservative |
S[edit] | ||
Saffron Walden | Rab Butler | Conservative |
St Albans | Sir Francis Fremantle | Conservative |
St Helens | William Albert Robinson | Labour |
St Ives | Rt Hon. Walter Runciman | Liberal National |
St Marylebone | Alec Cunningham-Reid | Conservative |
St Pancras North | Ian Fraser | Conservative |
St Pancras South East | Sir Alfred Beit, Bt | Conservative |
St Pancras South West | Sir George Mitcheson | Conservative |
Salford North | John Patrick Morris | Conservative |
Salford South | Hon. John Stourton | Conservative |
Salford West | James Frederick Emery | Conservative |
Salisbury | James Despencer-Robertson | Conservative |
Scarborough and Whitby | Sir Paul Latham, Bt | Conservative |
Seaham | Manny Shinwell | Labour |
Sedgefield | John Leslie | Labour |
Sevenoaks | Charles Ponsonby | Conservative |
Sheffield, Attercliffe | Cecil Wilson | Labour |
Sheffield, Brightside | Fred Marshall | Labour |
Sheffield, Central | William Boulton | Conservative |
Sheffield, Ecclesall | Sir Robert Ellis, Bt | Conservative |
Sheffield, Hallam | Sir Louis Smith | Conservative |
Sheffield, Hillsborough | Rt Hon. A. V. Alexander | Labour Co-op |
Sheffield, Park | George Lathan | Labour |
Shipley | Arthur Creech Jones | Labour |
Shoreditch | Ernest Thurtle | Labour |
Shrewsbury | Arthur Duckworth | Conservative |
Skipton | George Rickards | Conservative |
Smethwick | Roy Wise | Conservative |
Southampton (two members) |
William Craven-Ellis | Conservative |
Sir Charles Barrie | Liberal National | |
Southend-on-Sea | Henry Channon | Conservative |
South Molton | Rt Hon. George Lambert | Liberal National |
Southport | Robert Hudson | Conservative |
South Shields | James Chuter Ede | Labour |
Southwark Central | Harry Day | Labour |
Southwark North | Edward Strauss | Liberal National |
Southwark South East | Thomas Naylor | Labour |
Sowerby | Malcolm McCorquodale | Conservative |
Spelthorne | Sir Reginald Blaker, Bt | Conservative |
Spennymoor | Joseph Batey | Labour |
Spen Valley | Rt. Hon. Sir John Simon | Liberal National |
Stafford | Rt Hon. William Ormsby-Gore | Conservative |
Stalybridge and Hyde | Philip Dunne | Conservative |
Stepney Limehouse | Rt. Hon. Clement Attlee | Labour |
Stepney Mile End | Daniel Frankel | Labour |
Stirling and Falkirk | Joseph Westwood | Labour |
Stirlingshire East and Clackmannan | MacNeill Weir | Labour |
Stirlingshire West | Rt Hon. Tom Johnston | Labour |
Stockport (two members) |
Sir Arnold Gridley | Conservative |
Norman Hulbert | Conservative | |
Stockton on Tees | Harold Macmillan | Conservative |
Stoke Newington | Sir George Jones | Conservative |
Stoke-on-Trent | Ellis Smith | Labour |
Stone | Joseph Lamb | Conservative |
Stourbridge | Robert Morgan | Conservative |
Streatham | Sir William Lane-Mitchell | Conservative |
Stretford | Anthony Crossley | Conservative |
Stroud | Walter Perkins | Conservative |
Sudbury | The Rt Hon. Henry Burton | Conservative |
Sunderland (two members) |
Stephen Furness | Liberal National |
Samuel Storey | Conservative | |
Surrey East | Charles Emmott | Conservative |
Swansea East | David Williams | Labour |
Swansea West | Lewis Jones | Liberal National |
Swindon | Wavell Wakefield | Conservative |
T[edit] | ||
Tamworth | Sir John Mellor, Bt | Conservative |
Taunton | Edward Wickham | Conservative |
Tavistock | Colin Patrick | Conservative |
Thirsk and Malton | Robin Turton | Conservative |
Thornbury | Derrick Gunston | Conservative |
Tiverton | Gilbert Acland-Troyte | Conservative |
Tonbridge | Rt Hon. Herbert Spender-Clay | Conservative |
Torquay | Charles Williams | Conservative |
Totnes | Ralph Rayner | Conservative |
Tottenham North | Robert Morrison | Labour Co-op |
Tottenham South | Fred Messer | Labour |
Twickenham | Edward Keeling | Conservative |
Tynemouth | Sir Alexander Russell | Conservative |
U[edit] | ||
University of Wales | Ernest Evans | Liberal |
Uxbridge | John Llewellin | Conservative |
W[edit] | ||
Wakefield | Rt. Hon. Arthur Greenwood | Labour |
Wallasey | John Moore-Brabazon | Conservative |
Wallsend | Irene Ward | Conservative |
Walsall | Joseph Leckie | Liberal National |
Walthamstow East | Sir Brograve Beauchamp, Bt | Conservative |
Walthamstow West | Valentine McEntee | Labour |
Wandsworth Central | Sir Henry Jackson, Bt | Conservative |
Wansbeck | Bernard Cruddas | Conservative |
Warrington | Noel Goldie | Conservative |
Warwick and Leamington | Rt Hon. Anthony Eden | Conservative |
Waterloo | Malcolm Bullock | Conservative |
Watford | Rt Hon. Sir Dennis Herbert | Conservative |
Wednesbury | John Banfield | Labour |
Wellingborough | Archibald James | Conservative |
Wells | Anthony Muirhead | Conservative |
Wentworth | Wilfred Paling | Labour |
West Bromwich | Rt Hon. Frederick Roberts | Labour |
Westbury | Robert Grimston | Conservative |
Western Isles | Malcolm Macmillan | Labour |
West Ham Plaistow | Will Thorne | Labour |
West Ham Silvertown | Jack Jones | Labour |
West Ham Stratford | Thomas Groves | Labour |
West Ham Upton | Benjamin Gardner | Labour |
Westhoughton | Rhys Davies | Labour |
Westminster Abbey | Sidney Herbert | Conservative |
Westminster St George's | Duff Cooper | Conservative |
Westmorland | Rt Hon. Oliver Stanley | Conservative |
Weston-super-Mare | Ian Orr-Ewing | Conservative |
Whitechapel & St Georges | J. H. Hall | Labour |
Whitehaven | Frank Anderson | Labour |
Widnes | Richard Pilkington | Conservative |
Wigan | John Parkinson | Labour |
Willesden East | Daniel Somerville | Conservative |
Willesden West | Samuel Viant | Labour |
Wimbledon | Sir John Power, Bt | Conservative |
Winchester | Gerald Palmer | Conservative |
Windsor | Annesley Somerville | Conservative |
Wirral | Alan Graham | Conservative |
Wolverhampton Bilston | Ian Hannah | Conservative |
Wolverhampton East | Geoffrey Mander | Liberal |
Wolverhampton West | Sir Robert Bird, Bt | Conservative |
Woodbridge | Walter Ross-Taylor | Conservative |
Wood Green | Beverley Baxter | Conservative |
Woolwich East | George Hicks | Labour |
Woolwich West | Rt Hon. Sir Kingsley Wood | Conservative |
Worcester | Crawford Greene | Conservative |
Workington | Tom Cape | Labour |
The Wrekin | James Baldwin-Webb | Conservative |
Wrexham | Robert Richards | Labour |
Wycombe | Sir Alfred Knox | Conservative |
Y[edit] | ||
Yeovil | George Davies | Conservative |
York | Roger Lumley | Conservative |
By-elections
[edit]See the list of United Kingdom by-elections.
See also
[edit]- UK general election, 1935
- List of MPs for constituencies in Wales (1935–1945)
- List of parliaments of the United Kingdom
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c During World War II a succession of three Labour politicians acted as Leader of the Opposition for the purpose of allowing the House of Commons to function normally; however as in the mid World War I ministry, opposition did not run under a party-whipped system. As the Government 1940–45 was a coalition government in which Labour politicians functioned fully as members of the Government, neither Deputy Prime Minister Clement Attlee nor these three received the salary for the post of Leader of the Opposition. The largest party that opposed the war and was not part of the coalition – and therefore, in theory, the opposition – was the Independent Labour Party, led by James Maxton. With only three MPs, it tried to take over the opposition frontbench but was widely opposed in this venture.
Citations
[edit]- ^ Hansard, 3 September 1939 record of Parliament
- ^ "His Majesty's Government". Hansard 1803–2005. 13 May 1940. Archived from the original on 24 May 2023.
- ^ "Motion of Confidence in His Majesty's Government". Hansard 1803–2005. 29 January 1942. Archived from the original on 30 October 2023.
- ^ "Central Direction of the War". Hansard 1803–2005. 2 July 1942. Archived from the original on 10 November 2023.
- ^ "Bomb damage". UK Parliament. Archived from the original on 10 October 2023.
Whitaker's Almanacks for 1939 and 1944