Edmond Warnock

{{Short description|British politician}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}}

John Edmond Warnock PC(NI) KC (1887–19 December 1971Ian McAllister and Richard Rose, United Kingdom Facts, p.60) was an Irish barrister and politician.

Born in Belfast, he was educated at Methodist College Belfast and Trinity College, Dublin. He was called to the English Bar in 1911, to the Northern Ireland Bar in 1921 and was appointed as King's Counsel in 1933.{{cite web|title=Stormont Biographies |author=David Boothroyd |url=http://www.election.demon.co.uk/stormont/biographies.html |work=Politico’s Guide to the History of British Political Parties |accessdate=2 February 2015}} He served with the Royal Artillery during the First World War.

In 1938, he was elected to the Northern Ireland House of Commons as a Unionist member for Belfast, St Anne's, which he represented until his retirement from Parliament in 1969. He served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Home Affairs from 1938 to 1940, when he resigned{{cite web|title=Your Place and Mine – The Belfast Blitz |author=BBC Radio Ulster |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/northernireland/yourplaceandmine/topics/war/belfastblitz/context.shtml |work=The Belfast Blitz |accessdate=2 February 2015}} in protest at the failure to extend conscription to Northern Ireland during the Second World War. In 1944, he rejoined the Government when he was appointed as Minister of Home Affairs, an office which he held until 1946. From June to September 1946 he served as Deputy Attorney General and then from September 1946 until November 1949 as Minister of Home Affairs for a second time. He was then Attorney General for Northern Ireland from 1949–1956. He was appointed to the Privy Council for Northern Ireland in 1944, entitling him to be called The Right Honourable.

While Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Home Affairs (1938–40), Warnock, despite being advised by defence experts in Great Britain to prepare for German aerial attacks, decided to cancel orders previously placed for fire-fighting equipment and to recommend not building air raid shelters to protect either the civilian population or workers in factories, even those in the vital Harbour Estate area containing the shipyards and aircraft factories. Warnock believed that Belfast was too remote for German bombers to reach, and, in any case, they would pass more attractive targets en route. Also, in the event of a raid, he claimed "people would not have time" to reach shelters anyway, as it would "probably all be over in a matter of minutes". (see Brian Barton 'The Belfast Blitz: The City in the War Years', Ulster Historical Foundation, 2015. pages 38–41).

References

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{{succession box

| title = Member of Parliament for Belfast, St Anne's

| before = James Hanna McCormick

| after = Norman Laird

| years = 1938–1969}}

{{s-off}}

{{succession box|title=Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Home Affairs | before = John Clarke Davison | after = William Lowry |years = 1938–1940}}

{{succession box

| title = Minister of Home Affairs

| before = William Lowry

| after = Brian Maginess

| years = 1944–1946}}

{{succession box

| title = Minister of Home Affairs

| before = Brian Maginess

| after = Brian Maginess

| years = 1946–1949}}

{{succession box

| title = Attorney General for Northern Ireland

| before = Lancelot Curran

| after = Brian Maginess

| years = 1949–1956}}

{{s-end}}

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Category:1887 births

Category:1971 deaths

Category:Lawyers from Belfast

Category:Irish barristers

Category:Ulster Unionist Party members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1938–1945

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1945–1949

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1949–1953

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1953–1958

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1958–1962

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1962–1965

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1965–1969

Category:Members of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland

Category:Northern Ireland Cabinet ministers (Parliament of Northern Ireland)

Category:Attorneys general for Northern Ireland

Category:Northern Ireland junior government ministers (Parliament of Northern Ireland)

Category:Alumni of Trinity College Dublin

Category:People educated at Methodist College Belfast

Category:Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland for Belfast constituencies