- Sir Joseph Nall, 1st Baronet
Sir Joseph Nall, 1st Baronet (August 24 1887 - May 2, 1958) was a British Conservative politician and industrialist.
He was the son of Joseph Nall of
Worsley ,Lancashire . In 1904 he joined the family firm of Joseph Nall and Company, carriers and railway cartage agents. In 1906 he joined theBolton Artillery , a unit of the Volunteer Force. He continued his connection with the successors to the Volunteers, theTerritorial Force , serving in Egypt,Gallipoli and France inFirst World War . He was awarded theDistinguished Service Order in 1918."Obituary: Sir Joseph Nall", The Times, May 5, 1958]At the general election of 1918 he was elected as Conservative
member of parliament for the Hulme constituency ofManchester . He became the parliamentary private secretary to theHome Secretary , W C Bridgeman, and was knighted in 1924 as part ofStanley Baldwin 's resignation honours. ["Resignation Honours", February 9, 1924, p.10]He lost his parliamentary seat to the Labour Party at the 1929 election, but regained it two years later at the 1931 poll. In May 1935, Nall and four other Conservative MPs asked that the National Government whip be withdrawn from them in protest against proposals to introduce
Home Rule toIndia . ["Government Whip Declined, Five Conservative Members", The Times, May 24, 1935, p.18]In 1935 he became chairman of Joseph Nall and Company, and he subsequently held a number of directorships in companies in Northern England. He remained MP for Hulme until the next election in 1945, which was delayed by the
Second World War . Nall retired from parliament at this point.He was the last chairman of the Lancashire Electric Light and Power Company until its
nationalisation in 1947. The family firm was also taken over by the state in the following year, when it passed to theBritish Transport Commission . Nall continued to be the member of a number of other company boards includingLancashire United Transport andWilson and Walker Breweries .In 1954 Sir Joseph Nall was created a baronet "of Hoveringham Hall in the County of Nottingham". [LondonGazette |issue=40097 |date=1954-02-09 |startpage=865 |accessdate=2008-09-11] He died on May 2, 1958, and his funeral took place five days latter at
Hoveringham ,Nottinghamshire . ["Funeral: Colonel Sir Joseph Hall", The Times, May 8, 1958, p.12]References
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