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Gwilym Lloyd George

Welsh politician (1894–1967)


Welsh politician (1894–1967)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixMajor The Right Honourable
nameThe Viscount Tenby
honorific-suffix
imageGwilym_Lloyd_George_1922.jpg
captionLloyd George in 1922
office1Home Secretary
Minister of Welsh Affairs
term_start119 October 1954
term_end114 January 1957
primeminister1Winston Churchill
Anthony Eden
predecessor1Sir David Maxwell Fyfe
successor1Rab Butler (Home Office)
Henry Brooke (Welsh Affairs)
office3Minister of Fuel and Power
term_start33 June 1942
term_end326 July 1945
primeminister3Winston Churchill
predecessor3Office established
successor3Manny Shinwell
office2Minister of Food
term_start231 October 1951
term_end218 October 1954
primeminister2Winston Churchill
predecessor2Maurice Webb
successor2Derick Heathcoat-Amory
office4Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food
term_start422 October 1940
term_end43 June 1942
primeminister4Winston Churchill
predecessor4Robert Boothby
successor4William Mabane
office5Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade
term_start56 September 1939
term_end58 February 1941
primeminister5Neville Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
predecessor5Ronald Cross
successor5Charles Waterhouse
term_start63 September 1931
term_end627 October 1931
primeminister6Ramsay MacDonald
predecessor6Walter Smith
successor6Leslie Hore-Belisha
office8Member of Parliament for
Newcastle upon Tyne North
term_start825 October 1951
term_end814 January 1957
predecessor8Cuthbert Headlam
successor8William Elliott
office9Member of Parliament for
Pembrokeshire
term_start930 May 1929
term_end923 February 1950
predecessor9Charles Price
successor9Desmond Donnelly
office10Member of Parliament for
Pembrokeshire
term_start1015 November 1922
term_end1029 October 1924
predecessor10Sir Evan Davies Jones
successor10Charles Price
office7Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
term_start727 February 1957
term_end714 February 1967
as a hereditary peer
predecessor7Peerage created
successor7The 2nd Viscount Tenby
birth_nameGwilym Lloyd George
birth_date
birth_placeCriccieth, Wales
death_date
partyLiberal
National Liberal
alma_materJesus College, Cambridge
spouse
children{{plain list
parents{{plain list

| honorific-prefix = Major The Right Honourable | honorific-suffix = Minister of Welsh Affairs Anthony Eden Henry Brooke (Welsh Affairs) Winston Churchill Newcastle upon Tyne North Pembrokeshire Pembrokeshire Lord Temporal as a hereditary peer National Liberal

  • David Lloyd George, 2nd Viscount Tenby
  • William Lloyd George, 3rd Viscount Tenby
  • David Lloyd George
  • Margaret Owen

Gwilym Lloyd George, 1st Viscount Tenby, , later hyphenated Lloyd-George (4 December 1894 – 14 February 1967), was a Welsh politician and cabinet minister. The younger son of David Lloyd George, he served as Home Secretary from 1954 to 1957.

Background, education and military service

Born in Criccieth in North Wales, Lloyd George was the second son of Liberal Prime Minister David Lloyd George and his first wife, Margaret, daughter of Richard Owen. His sister Megan was also active in politics, but the two moved in opposite political directions: Gwilym to the right, towards the Conservatives, and Megan to the left, eventually joining the Labour Party.

He was educated at Eastbourne College and Jesus College, Cambridge. Shortly after the outbreak of World War I he and his elder brother Richard were commissioned as Temporary Second lieutenants into the 6th (Caernarvonshire and Anglesey) Battalion, Royal Welch Fusiliers of the Territorial Force, soon transferring to the 15th (Service) Battalion, Royal Welsh Fusiliers (1st London Welsh) of 'Kitchener's Army'. In 1915 he became aide-de-camp to Major-General Ivor Philipps, commander of the 38th (Welsh) Division. He transferred to the Anti-Aircraft branch of the Royal Garrison Artillery in 1916 and rose to the rank of major, being known for most of his political career as Major Lloyd George. He was also mentioned in despatches.

Early political career 1922–45

Leaving the army in 1918, Lloyd George found employment working with his father in the post war coalition government. This also included being a trustee for David Lloyd George's National Liberal Political Fund.

Lloyd George was Member of Parliament (MP) for Pembrokeshire from 1922 to 1924, and again from 1929 to 1950. He was initially elected as a National Liberal, but then joined the re-united Liberal Party in 1923. In 1931, Lloyd George initially took ministerial office as Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade in the National Government of Ramsay Macdonald, but resigned when his father David Lloyd George withdrew his support from the government. Gwilym Lloyd George was subsequently a member of the Independent Liberal group from 1931 to 1935, who were opposed to the continuation of the National Government. This group then subsequently returned to the main Liberal Party following the 1935 general election.

In 1939, Lloyd George joined Neville Chamberlain's government for the same post he resigned from in 1931. From then on Lloyd George operated in effect as an independent Liberal. In 1941, he was appointed to the office of Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food and then Minister of Fuel and Power in 1942. Lloyd George stayed in the post until the 1945 general election It was after the death of his father in 1945 that Gwilym began hyphenating his surname as Lloyd-George.

Later political career, 1945 onward

Following the 1945 general election in which he stood as a 'Liberal and Conservative', and was returned by a majority of 168, Lloyd George was approached by the Liberal Party and its rival the Liberal National Party to chair their respective political organisations. Lloyd George turned them both down. Winston Churchill offered him a position in the Conservative Party's Shadow cabinet but was allowed to remain as a 'Liberal'. In 1946 Lloyd-George formally lost the Liberal Party whip.

From this point onwards he did not associate with his erstwhile Liberal colleagues (who included his sister Lady Megan) and he was openly supported by Conservatives in his constituency. In early January 1950 he was publicly disowned by the Liberal Party for supporting Conservative candidates in constituencies contested by a Liberal candidate.

Lloyd-George lost his seat (standing as a National Liberal and Conservative) in the 1950 general election. The Liberal Party did not field a candidate against him but this time Lloyd George lost to a Labour Party candidate Desmond Donnelly by 129 votes. His career in Welsh politics at an end, a year later Lloyd-George returned to parliament as a National Liberal for Newcastle upon Tyne North in the 1951 general election. His candidature was backed by Churchill although disgruntled Conservatives in the local party supported an independent against Lloyd George.

Returning to office, Prime Minister Winston Churchill appointed him Minister of Food 1951–1954, and Home Secretary and Minister for Welsh Affairs from 1954 until his retirement in 1957. Lloyd-George was raised to the peerage as Viscount Tenby, of Bulford in the County of Pembroke, on 12 February 1957 and took his seat in the House of Lords on 27 February.

In 1955, during his time as Home Secretary, he had refused to commute the death sentence imposed on Ruth Ellis; she was the last woman to be executed in the UK.

Family

Lloyd George married Edna Gwenfron, daughter of David Jones, in 1921. They had two children: David Lloyd George, 2nd Viscount Tenby (1922–1983), and William Lloyd George, 3rd Viscount Tenby (1927–2023). He died aged 72, and was succeeded by his eldest son, David.

Lady Tenby died in 1971.

Arms

References

Sources

References

  1. "LLOYD GEORGE (FAMILY) {{!}} Dictionary of Welsh Biography".
  2. [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/28906/page/7406 ''London Gazette'', 18 September 1914.]
  3. [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/29008/supplement/10773 ''London Gazette'', 16 December 1914.]
  4. {{London Gazette. (1 August 1916)
  5. {{London Gazette. (17 May 1917)
  6. Not the same party as the one initially created in [[National Liberal Party (UK, 1931). 1931]]
  7. He was the only Liberal to do this. The rest of the Liberal Party ministers resigned in May 1945.
  8. Name changed to National Liberal Party in 1948
  9. {{London Gazette. (12 February 1957)
  10. {{Hansard. link
  11. "Ellis appeal is open and shut case - of futility: - ProQuest".
  12. (2002). "Debrett's peerage, baronetage, knightage, and companionage". Debrett's Peerage Ltd..
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