- John Peyton, Baron Peyton of Yeovil
John Wynne William Peyton, Baron Peyton of Yeovil PC, FZS (
13 February 1919 –22 November 2006 ) was a British politician. He was ConservativeMember of Parliament for Yeovil for 32 years, from 1951 to 1983, and an early and leading member of theConservative Monday Club . He served as Minister of Transport (later renamed Minister of Transport Industries in the Department of the Environment) from 1970 to 1974. He was a candidate for leader of the Conservative Party in 1975, losing toMargaret Thatcher .Early years
Peyton was the son of
I. E. Peyton . He was educated atEton College . As a member of the Eton OTC, he was a member of the honour guard within the grounds ofWindsor Castle at thestate funeral of King George V in 1936. He read law atTrinity College, Oxford from 1937, but took a commission in the 15/19 Hussars in 1939 on the outbreak ofWorld War II . He was sent toFrance as part of theBritish Expeditionary Force , but was captured inBelgium in May 1940, and spent 5 years in a Germanprisoner of war camps, first in Laufen inBavaria , thenWarburg inWestphalia , thenEichstätt inBavaria in mid 1942, and finallyMoosburg inBavaria from early 1945. He was liberated by American troops later in 1945. A brother was killed atSt Nazaire in 1942.Peyton studied law while confined, and became a
barrister , being called to the bar in 1945. He accompanied SirWalter Monckton , advisor to theNizam of Hyderabad , toIndia in 1946 and 1947, in the run up toIndian independence . He became a broker atLloyd's of London in 1947, and then pursued a political career.He was married twice. He married Diana, daughter of Douglas Clinch, in 1947, but was divorced in early 1966. They had two sons, one of which died young, and a daughter. He remarried on
27 July 1966 , to Mary Cobbold, daughter of Colonel Humphrey Wyndham (also her second marriage).Politics
Peyton unsuccessfully contested the safe Labour seat of
Bristol Central for the Conservative Party in the1950 UK general election . He was subsequently elected aMember of Parliament for Yeovil in the1951 UK general election . He becameParliamentary Private Secretary toNigel Birch , a junior defence minister, from 1952 to 1958. He supported theSuez War . He then served asParliamentary Secretary to theSecretary of State for Power from 1962 to 1964. He remained opposition spokeman on power in opposition, until 1966.He became Minister of Transport in the government of
Edward Heath after the1970 UK general election , one of sixMonday Club MP members to achieve high office. His ministerial office was renamed Minister of Transport Industries when it was combined into the newDepartment of the Environment in October 1970. He remained in this position until theOctober 1974 UK general election . He was in office when theMersey Docks and Harbour Port Board collapsed; he privatisedBritish Rail 's travel agency,Thomas Cook , in 1972; and made helmets compulsory for motorcyclists and seatbelts compulsory for car drivers. He also delivered aGreen Paper that proposed theChannel Tunnel .He became shadow
Leader of the House of Commons in opposition. In 1975, he sought to become leader of the Conservative Party, standing in the second ballot afterMargaret Thatcher defeatedEdward Heath in the first ballow. He gained only eleven votes in the election, coming bottom of the poll, and Thatcher was elected by a convincing majority. He was shadow Minister for Agriculture in Thatcher's shadow cabinet, and was offered the position of Minister of Transport after the Conservative victory in the1979 UK general election , but refused to return to his old office and became the only member of the shadow cabinet not to secure a ministerial position in the new government.Peyton stood down from the House of Commons at the 1983 general election, and Yeovil was won by
Paddy Ashdown for the Liberal Party. Peyton was made alife peer as Baron Peyton of Yeovil, of Yeovil in the County ofSomerset the same year.He held right-wing views, but consistently opposed
capital punishment , and he led a rebellion against the privatisation of the British rail industry underJohn Major in 1990. He also supported reform of the House of Lords to create a wholly directly elected second chamber.Outside politics
Peyton was chairman of the British subsidiary of the
Texas Instruments from 1974 to 1990. He also held positions with theLondon and Manchester Assurance Company ,Trusthouse Forte , andBritish Aluminium , of which he was chairman from 1987 to 1991. He was treasurer of theZoological Society of London from 1984 to 1991.He published an
autobiography , "Without Benefit of Laundry" in 1997, and a biography ofSolly Zuckerman in 2001.He was survived by his second wife, Mary, and his daughter and surviving son from his first marriage.
References
* "Dod's Parliamentary Companion 1973", 160th edition, published by Sell's Publications Ltd., Epsom, Surrey.
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,1957643,00.html Obituary] , "
The Guardian ",27 November 2006
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article2013285.ece Obituary] , "The Independent ",27 November 2006
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=Q5SGMHOBBXLF3QFIQMGSFFOAVCBQWIV0?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2006/11/24/db2401.xml Obituary] , "The Daily Telegraph ",24 November 2006
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2468307,00.html Obituary] , "The Times ",24 November 2006 External links
* [http://www.dodonline.co.uk/engine.asp?lev1=4&lev2=38&menu=81&biog=y&id=1866 Biography]
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