- Frank Kingsley Griffith
Infobox MP
honorific-prefix =
name = Frank Kingsley Griffith
honorific-suffix =
caption =
constituency_MP = Middlesbrough West
parliament = United Kingdom
majority =
term_start =
term_end =
predecessor =Walter Trevelyan Thompson
successor =Harcourt Johnstone
birth_date = Birth date|1889|12|23|df=y
birth_place =Upper Norwood ,Surrey
death_date = Death date and age|1962|9|25|1887|12|29|df=y
death_place =
nationality =
party = Liberal
spouse = 1st, Eleanor Bruce 2nd, Margaret Louch
children =
residence =
alma_mater =
occupation =
profession =
cabinet =
committees =
portfolio =
religion =Frank Kingsley Griffith (
23 December 1889 –25 September 1962 ) was a British Liberal Party politician,barrister andCounty Court judge .Early life
Griffith was born in
Upper Norwood ,Surrey , the son of an army officer [the Times 14.2.28] . He was educated atMarlborough andBalliol College , Oxford. In 1912 he was president of theOxford Union [The Times, 21.10.2] . Griffith served in the army throughout the Great War first in theGloucestershire Regiment and then theLincolnshire Regiment , attaining the rank of Captain. He was wounded twice and was awarded theMilitary Cross . In 1915 he was called to the bar by theInner Temple and after the war he joined the North-Eastern Circuit.Politics
Griffith was one time chairman of the
National League of Young Liberals . He was well known as a good platform performer in politics and for being an outstanding young thinker ranked alongside the likes of Elliott Dodds [Trevor Wilson, The Downfall of the Liberal Party 1914-1935, Cornell University Press, 1966 p.319] . He contested the Bromley division ofKent for the Liberal party in the general elections of 1922, 1923 and 1924 being unsuccessful on all three occasions.By 1927, Griffith was so well thought of in Liberal circles that he was appointed to the Liberal Organizing Committee under the Chairmanship of future party leader
Herbert Samuel along with other party luminaries such asArchie Sinclair another future leader [The Times, 17.2.27] . In March 1928 he was adopted as candidate for the by-election in the Liberal seat of Middlesbrough West which he held in a three cornered contest [Liberals: The History of the Liberal and Liberal Democrat Parties; Roy Douglas, Hambledon, 2005, p.215] . At the previous general election (1924) the Liberal candidate was Trevelyan Thomson [The Times,24.2.28] who was so entrehcned in the seat that he had been unopposed. However Labour put up a strong challenge against Griffith at the by-election, losing by just 89 votes. Griffith got 36.3% of the poll, compared to Labour’s 36% and the Conservatives’ 27.8% [C Cook and J Ramsden, By-elections in British Politics: UCL Press, 1997 p.275] . Griffith fought mainly on the traditional Liberal stance ofFree Trade but also called for a programme of public works together with social reform and industrial reconstruction [The Times, 24.2.28] . This platform anticipated the Liberal election manifesto of 1929 based on the ‘coloured’ books ofDavid Lloyd George and the economic models ofJohn Maynard Keynes . In fact Lloyd George turned up to speak for Griffith in the campaign [The Times, 7.3.28] as did Herbert Samuel [The Times, 8.3.28] . In 1931-32 Griffith wasparliamentary private secretary to Sir Herbert Samuel, by then theHome Secretary and Liberal leader. Once elected to the House of Commons he gained the respect of his peers in the Parliamentary Liberal Party, being an able speaker in the chamber with a good parliamentary style [Percy Harris, Forty Years In and Out of Parliament; Andrew Melrose, 1949, p.150-151] .The law
In the law, Griffith was Recorder of
Richmond, Yorkshire [The Times, 25.1.32] from 1932-1940 and in 1940 he was appointed a County Court Judge in Hull which required him to vacate his Commons seat and create a by-election [The Times, 18.7.40] . At this election the Liberal candidateHarcourt Johnstone was returned unopposed under the wartime electoral truce [the Times, 8.8.40] . From 1947-1956 Griffiths was chairman of East RidingQuarter Sessions and he retired as a judge in January 1957 [The Times, 2.1.57] .Family
In 1924 he married Eleanor Bruce who was the only daughter of Sir Robert Bruce [Liberal Year Book, 1928; p.92] and they had one daughter. His wife died in 1954 and Griffith was remarried the following year to Margaret Louch. He died in
Scarborough, North Yorkshire on25 September 1962 . [The Times,27 September 1962 ]References
Reflist
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.