- Richard Stokes
Sir Richard Rapier Stokes (27 january 1897 –3 august 1957 ) was a British Labour Party politician who served briefly asLord Privy Seal in 1951.Stokes was educated at
Downside School , theRoyal Military Academy, Woolwich andTrinity College, Cambridge . He served in theRoyal Artillery duringWorld War I , winning theMilitary Cross and bar and theCroix de Guerre . He became chairman and managing director of the engineering firmRansomes & Rapier Ltd.Stokes won the Ipswich seat in a 1938
by-election , which he kept in the 1945, 1950, 1951 and 1955 elections. He was known for his independence in parliament, including, with Bishop George Bell and fellow labour MPAlfred Salter , opposing areastrategic bombing duringWorld War II . After the RAF's bombing of Dresden on the night ofFebruary 13 and the early hours ofFebruary 14 , his questions in the House about the act, were in part responsible for the reappraisal of the Government's bombing policy in the last month of the war inEurope .He was appointed Lord Privy Seal and the new position of
Minister of Materials in April 1951, succeedingErnest Bevin but served only a few months before Labour lost the 1951 general election.Stokes died in 1957 as a result of injuries he received in a car accident.
External links
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUstokes.htm Profile]
References
*cite book | author= | title=The Times House of Commons 1945 | publisher= | year=1945 | editor= | id=
*cite book | author= | title=The Times House of Commons 1950 | publisher= | year=1950 | editor= | id=
*cite book | author= | title=The Times House of Commons 1955 | publisher= | year=1955 | editor= | id=
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