- Keith Stainton
Keith Monin Stainton (
8 November 1921 –3 November 2001 ) was a British Conservative politician andWorld War II hero inFrance .Keith Stainton was born in
Kendal , the son of a Kendal butcher and aBelgian refugee he had met during the First World War. He leftKendal School at 14 and worked as an insurance clerk from 1936 until military service. In early 1940 he volunteered for the Navy and was commissioned into the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, into submarines and served on the famous French submarine "Casabianca ". Part French himself, he was awarded theLégion d'honneur , the Croix de Guerre avec Palme and a "citation à l'ordre de L'Armée" for his torpedo actions in the Mediterranean.After the war he read Economics at
Manchester University where he was founder chairman of theConservative Association . From 1949 to 1952 he was a leader writer for theFinancial Times . He was also a founder member of theBow Group and first chairman of Croydon East Conservative Association. After working as a management consultant, he joined a major food manufacturing and distribution company and became managing director and chairman. He was aLloyd's underwriter specialising in maritime and aviation reinsurance.Stainton was
Member of Parliament for Sudbury and Woodbridge from a 1963by-election until the 1983 general election, when the seat was abolished by boundary changes.Edward Heath made him opposition spokesman on aviation in 1965.Stainton married twice, and had six children by his first wife Vanessa Ann Heald (marriage dissolved). He married Frances Easton in 1980.
References
*"Times Guide to the House of Commons 1966"
*"Times Guide to the House of Commons 1979"
*rayment
* The Independent, November 2001, obituary by Tam Dalyell
* The Times, November 2001, obituary
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