Sir_Archibald_Southby,_1st_Baronet

Sir Archibald Southby, 1st Baronet

Sir Archibald Southby, 1st Baronet

British politician


Sir Archibald Richard James Southby, 1st Baronet DL (8 July 1886 – 30 October 1969) was an English Royal Navy officer and Conservative Party politician.

Quick Facts Member of Parliament for Epsom, Preceded by ...

Career

Royal Navy

Southby joined the Royal Navy, and on 15 September 1902 was posted as a naval cadet to the pre-dreadnought battleship HMS Magnificent,[1] flagship to the second-in-command of the Channel Fleet. The following month it was reported that he would be lent to the armoured cruiser HMS Hogue which was in the last stages of completion before her first commission in November.[2]

In 1908 and 1909 he commanded torpedo boats. In the period following the First World War, he took part in the demilitarisation of Heligoland.[3]

Member of Parliament

After his return home to England, he was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for the Epsom constituency in Surrey at a by-election in 1928.

Norway Debate

He spoke in the Norway Debate in the House of Commons. Southby spoke immediately after Leo Amery. Amery's famous speech against the government of Neville Chamberlain closed with words, "Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go". Southby rose at 8.44pm and spoke in defence of the government -[4]

It is easy to talk glibly of Ministers' failure without specifying exactly in what way they have failed; it is easy to throw about charges of ineptitude, inability and procrastination without specifying exactly to what degree those charges are able to be substantiated. I listened to every word that the right hon. Gentleman said. He was full of general accusations of failure against the Government. It seemed to me that if he had been in charge of the affairs of the nation at the beginning of the war, rightly or wrongly, he would have considered that the proper action for us to have taken would have been to have gone into Norway and Sweden before Germany did. He may be right or wrong in that view. But if he was right in that view then we would, I presume, be doing right now to go into Holland and Belgium lest Germany should come in there before us.

Archibald Southby MP, House of Commons – 7 May 1940

Buchenwald

Southby travelled as part of the British parliamentary delegation to the Buchenwald Concentration Camp in April 1945. He described the journey as one, "which I felt it was my duty to undertake and which I shall never regret". However, the journey brought on an illness which was "a most unpleasant mixture of influenza and near jaundice".[5]

Later parliamentary career

He held the seat for nearly 20 years until his resignation in 1947 by the procedural device of accepting the Stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds. He was made a Baronet in 1937, of Burford in the county of Oxfordshire.

Family

Southby was twice married: firstly to Phyllis Mary Garton, on 20 July 1909, from whom he was divorced in 1962. They had two sons, Sir Archibald Richard Charles Southby, 2nd Bt, and Lt.-Cdr. Patrick Southby (born 1913).[6] He married secondly to Noreen Vera Simm, on 28 March 1962.

Arms

Coat of arms of Sir Archibald Southby, 1st Baronet
Crest
A demi-lion Or holding in the dexter paw an apple Gules.[7]
Escutcheon
Or a chevron between three apples Gules.

Notes

  1. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times. No. 36855. London. 25 August 1902. p. 8.
  2. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times. No. 36901. London. 17 October 1902. p. 8.
  3. The Times, 16 January, A Visit To Heligoland, Archibald RJ Southby
  4. "CONDUCT OF THE WAR. (Hansard, 7 May 1940)". api.parliament.uk. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  5. "Churchill College". www-archives.chu.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  6. Burke's Peerage. 1949.

References

More information Parliament of the United Kingdom, Baronetage of the United Kingdom ...



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