Herbert Harvey Spencer
{{Short description|English stuff manufacturer and trader and Liberal politician}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2016}}
{{Use British English|date=November 2016}}
Herbert Harvey Spencer (1869 – 23 February 1926) {{Cite web |url=http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/Bcommons5.htm |title=Archived copy |access-date=1 February 2009 |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181028211113/http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/Bcommons5.htm |archive-date=28 October 2018 }} was an English stuff manufacturer and trader and Liberal Party politician.
Family
Spencer was married and had three sons. Two died during the First World War and the third was killed in a mountaineering accident in Canada.The Times, 15 February 1924 p14
Career
By profession Spencer was a cotton merchant The Times, 5 March 1913 p10 and worsted manufacturer The Times, 12 December 1925 p12 and in 1925 he gave evidence to the Board of Trade safeguarding enquiry into the worsted trade.The Times, 25 February 1926 p16 He was sometime secretary to the Bradford and District Manufacturers’ Association The Times, 18 September 1923 p14 and connected to the Association of Chambers of Commerce The Times, 9 July 1924 p8 Spencer also spent some time in Australia engaged in farming and land development.The Times, 11 April 1923 p7
Politics
= 1901–1918 =
Spencer was described as a fierce defender of Liberalism and was a self-declared warrior against what he called the fallacies of socialism.The Times, 20 March 1923, p12The Times, 18 January 1924 p7 In 1901 he was elected as a member of Bradford Town Council. In 1913 he was adopted to fight the next election as Liberal candidate in Preston. However come the 1918 general election Spencer did not fight Preston. The two member constituency was fought and won by two Conservatives for the Lloyd George Coalition, who had presumably received the Coalition Coupon. Against them stood one Labour and one Independent Asquithian candidate, Lieutenant J J O'Neill.F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949; Political Reference Publications, Glasgow, 1949 p220
= 1922–1923 =
Spencer was however elected to the House of Commons at the 1922 general election as an Independent Liberal at Bradford South. He faced no Lloyd George National Liberal opponent but was involved in a tight three-cornered contest with Labour and Conservative adversaries. He gained the seat from the Conservatives by the margin of 906 votes over Labour, with the Tories in third place.F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949; Political Reference Publications, Glasgow, 1949 p102 Spencer held his seat at the 1923 general election in a similar three-party contest, despite being unwell and unable to campaign in person.The Times, 23 November 1923 p16 This time he held on by 675 votes over Labour.F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results, p102
=1924=
By the time of the 1924 general election the tide was turning against the Liberals in the aftermath of the first Labour government. During the 1924 Parliament the Liberals had often been divided over support for the government of Ramsay MacDonald. Even on the initial vote to bring down the government of Stanley Baldwin and install Labour's minority administration, ten Liberal MPs voted with the Conservatives. Spencer also defied the party whip in this period voting against the Labour government and with the Conservatives on the Evictions Bill (i.e. evictions under the Rent Restriction Act)The Times, 8 April 1924 p14 and twice on the Housing (Financial Provisions) Bill.The Times, 25 June 1924 p14The Times, 26 July 1924 p12 The sort of difficulties which beset the Liberal Party in Parliament were apparent nationally at the 1924 general election. The Liberals were finding it difficult to define their political position in relation to the Labour and Conservative parties and electorally, as the third party in a two party system, they were being targeted and squeezed by the others.David Dutton, A History of the Liberal Party in the Twentieth Century; Palgrave Macmillan, 2004 p98ff These electoral currents proved too strong for Spencer and in another three-cornered fight in Bradford South he lost to Labour's William Hirst, even falling to the bottom of the poll behind the Conservatives.
=Appointments=
In 1924, Spencer was appointed to sit on a Board of Trade committee to look into bankruptcy law.The Times, 23 June 1924 p9 He was a strong adherent of Free Trade and land value taxation.United Committee for the Taxation of Land Values, Land & Liberty: Monthly Journal for Land Value Taxation and Free Trade, 1926 p69
Golf
Spencer was a keen golfer and played in many tournaments. He also played for the House of CommonsThe Times, 30 June 1924 p6 and was sometime member of the Golf Championship Committee.The Times, 12 May 1923 p12
Death
References
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External links
- {{Hansard-contribs | mr-herbert-spencer | Herbert Spencer }}
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{{succession box
| title = Member of Parliament for Bradford South
| before = Vernon Willey
| after = William Hirst
}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Spencer, Herbert Harvey}}