Edgar Lansbury (politician)
{{EngvarB|date=November 2022}}
{{Short description|British politician (1887–1935)}}
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{{infobox officeholder
| name = Edgar Lansbury
| image = Edgar Lansbury in 1924.jpg
| caption = Lansbury in 1924
| birth_name = Edgar Isaac Lansbury
| birth_place = England
| birth_date = 3 April 1887
| death_place =
| death_date = 28 May 1935 (aged 48)
| occupation = Politician
| party = Communist Party of Great Britain
| otherparty = Labour Party
| office = Mayor of Poplar
| term_start = 1924
| term_end = 1925
| predecessor = Charles Key
| successor = Joseph Hammond
| parents = George Lansbury (father)
| spouse = {{marriage|Minnie Glassman|1914|1 January 1922|end=d.}}
{{marriage|Moyna Macgill|1924}}
| office3 = Councillor of Poplar Borough Council
| term3 = 1912–1925
| successor5 =
| predecessor5 =
| successor3 = Vacancy after resignation
| predecessor3 = Unknown
}}
Edgar Isaac Lansbury (3 April 1887 – 28 May 1935) was a British Communist politician. His daughter was the English-American actress Angela Lansbury.
Life and career
Lansbury was the son of Elizabeth (née Brine) and politician George Lansbury, who was leader of the Labour Party during the 1930s. He grew up in Poplar in London, and joined the Civil Service at a young age. In 1910, he left to set up with his brother as timber merchants.Michael Walker, [https://grahamstevenson.me.uk/2008/09/19/isaac-edgar-lansbury/ Profile], Compendium of Communist Biography. Accessed 22 July 2023.
Lansbury was elected to Poplar Council in 1912, serving alongside his father. He represented both the Labour Party and (after its foundation in 1920) the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). Later that same year, he worked on his father's campaign for Parliamentary re-election, after resignation over the issue, on a radical platform of women's suffrage at the Bow and Bromley by-election.John Shepherd, [http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/lab/87/shepherd.html A Life on the Left : George Lansbury (1859–1940), a Case Study in Recent Labour Biography] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080706185222/http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/lab/87/shepherd.html |date=6 July 2008 }} He also supported Sylvia Pankhurst's East London Federation of Suffragettes, serving as Honorary Treasurer in 1915.Elizabeth Crawford, The women's suffrage movement: a reference guide, 1866–1928, p. 185.
In 1917 he became liable to call-up for military service, and an initial application for exemption as a conscientious objector was refused, but the refusal was overturned by the London County Military Service Appeal Tribunal.Julia Bush, Behind the Lines, 1984.
In 1921, Lansbury was one of 30 Poplar councillors to be jailed as a result of the Poplar Rates Rebellion, while, in 1924, he was elected as a substitute member of the CPGB's Central Committee. After his first wife Minnie Lansbury died in 1922, he married actress Moyna Macgill and the two moved to Regent's Park. From 1924 to 1925 he served as Mayor of Poplar, the country's second Communist mayor after Joe Vaughan. He left the Council in 1925, the same year that his first child, the future actress, Angela Lansbury, was born. Subsequent twin sons, Bruce and Edgar Jr (born 1930), later became prominent film and television producers and writers.
In 1927, the Lansburys' timber firm was declared bankrupt."Mr. Edgar Lansbury's "Extravagance", Manchester Guardian, 20 December 1927 In 1934, Lansbury wrote George Lansbury, My Father. In the work he inadvertently quoted from confidential documents his father had allowed him to see. He was found to have contravened section 2 of the Official Secrets Act 1911, and fined; his book was recalled in order for the text to be censored."Mr. Edgar Lansbury", Manchester Guardian, 29 May 1935.Clive Ponting, The Right to Know: The Inside Story of the Belgrano Affair, Sphere Books, 1985. He died of stomach cancer in 1935.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}
Publications by Lansbury
- [http://contentdm.warwick.ac.uk/cdm/ref/collection/health/id/1100 Poplarism ; The Truth about the Poplar Scale Relief and the Action of the Ministry of Health] (1924)
- George Lansbury, My Father (1934)
References
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Sources
- Janine Booth, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111007123041/http://www.merlinpress.co.uk/acatalog/GUILTY_AND_PROUD_OF_IT_.html "Guilty and Proud of it – Poplar's Rebel Councillors and Guardians 1919-1925"], Merlin Press, 2009.
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{{succession box|title=Honorary Treasurer of the East London Federation of Suffragettes|before=Evelina Haverfield|after=Norah Smyth|years=1915}}
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{{succession box|title=Mayor of Poplar|years=1924–1925|before=Charles Key|after=Joseph Hammond}}
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Category:19th-century English people
Category:20th-century English politicians
Category:Communist Party of Great Britain councillors
Category:Members of Poplar Metropolitan Borough Council
Category:Labour Party (UK) councillors
Category:Mayors of places in Greater London
Category:Members of the Workers' Socialist Federation
Category:British conscientious objectors
Category:Deaths from stomach cancer in England
Category:Politicians from the London Borough of Tower Hamlets