Stopford_Brooke_(politician)

Stopford Brooke (politician)

Stopford Brooke (politician)

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Stopford William Wentworth Brooke (1859 – 23 April 1938) was a British politician. He was a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) from 1906 to 1910.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Biography

Brooke was born in Kensington, London, the son of Stopford Brooke, an Irish clergymen, chaplain to Queen Victoria and writer, and his wife Emma (née Wentworth-Beaumont).[1] He was educated at Winchester College and University College, Oxford, graduating in 1881. He was a Unitarian minister in England between 1883 and 1886 and then went to America where he was minister at the First Church (Unitarian) in Boston, Massachusetts.[2] He married Helen Ellis from Boston in 1903. They had one son and a daughter. His wife died in 1928.[3]

He was elected to the Commons in the 1906 general election, succeeding the Conservative MP Walter Guthrie in the Bow and Bromley constituency. He left Parliament in the January 1910 general election and was succeeded by the Conservative Alfred du Cros. He tried to re-enter Parliament at the December 1910 general election as a Liberal candidate at Bassetlaw in Nottinghamshire and was defeated by the sitting Unionist MP William Ellis Hume-Williams by a narrow 215 vote margin.[4]

In 1934, Brooke, as Secretary and Treasurer of the Hurtwood Control Committee, raised £1,000 for bungalows to house gypsy families living in Hurtwood, Albury, Surrey.[5]

Brooke died 23 April 1938 in Cranleigh, Surrey.[6] His son, Somerset Stopford Brooke, also stood for Parliament as Liberal candidate in Guildford at the 1929 general election and as Liberal National in Shoreditch in 1935.[7]


References

Specific
  1. "Children of Stopford Augustus Brooke". Holmesacourt.org. Archived from the original on 24 July 2008. Retrieved 19 June 2008.
  2. R K Webb, Stopford Augustus Brooke, Dictionary of National Biography, oup 2004-08
  3. Who was Who, OUP 2007.
  4. The Times, House of Commons 1911; Politico's Publishing 2004, p. 83.
  5. The Times House of Commons 1935; Politico's Publishing 2003, p. 42.
General
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