Arthur Walter James

Arthur Walter James (30 June 1912 – 5 August 2015) was a British journalist and Liberal Party politician.

Arthur Walter James
Born(1912-06-30)30 June 1912
Died5 August 2015(2015-08-05) (aged 103)
OccupationBritish politician

Background

He was the son of W.J. James OBE. He was educated at Uckfield Grammar School and Keble College, Oxford, where he obtained a 1st Class degree in Modern History. He was a Liddon Student and an Arnold Essay Prizeman. He married, in 1939, Elisabeth Howroyd. They had one daughter. The marriage was dissolved in 1956. He then married in 1957, Ann Jocelyn Burton. They had one daughter, one adopted son and two adopted daughters. She died in 2004.[1]

Professional career

He was Senior Demy of Magdalen College, Oxford, 1935; Scholar in Mediæval Studies, British School at Rome, 1935; He was on the Editorial staff, at the Manchester Guardian, 1937–46. NFS 1939–45. He moved to London where he was Deputy Editor, The Times Educational Supplement, 1947–51, Editor, 1952–69; Special Advisor on Education, Times Newspapers, 1969–71; also Editor, Technology, 1957–60. He was Reader in Journalism, at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, 1971–74. He was a Member of: BBC General Advisory Council, 1956–64; Council of Industrial Design, 1961–66; Council, Royal Society of Arts, 1964; Committee, British-American Associates, 1964; He was a Governor, Central School of Art and Design, 1966. Woodard Lecturer, 1965.

Political career

Both James and hist first wife, Elisabeth Howroyd were active in politics for the Liberal Party in the Manchester area. He took a particular interest in the Liberal policy of Profit sharing. He was Liberal candidate for the Bury Division of Lancashire at the 1945 General Election.

General Election 1945: Bury[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Walter Fletcher 14,012 39.9
Labour Sydney Hand 13,902 39.6
Liberal Arthur Walter James 7,211 20.5
Majority 110 0.3
Turnout 78.2
Conservative hold Swing

After the election he was re-adopted by the Bury Liberal Association to contest the seat again and remained PPC through to 1947 when he moved to London. Following boundary changes, the seat was abolished and he did not stand for parliament again.[3]

Later years

Upon turning 100, he wrote an article for The Sunday Times reflecting on his age.[4] He was believed to be one of only three known surviving candidates from the 1945 general election. The others being Denis Healey and Jeremy Hutchinson.[5] He died on 5 August 2015, aged 103.[6]

Publications

He was the Editor of Temples and Faiths 1958; The Christian in Politics, 1962; The Teacher and his World, 1962; A Middle-class Parent’s Guide to Education, 1964; He was also a contributor to Looking Forward to the Seventies, 1967.

gollark: I totally would.
gollark: And modern routers and stuff are often hilariously insecure. There are botnets of them.
gollark: You can also get approximate location from an IP.
gollark: In summary, such messages are wrong and bad (probably originally a joke or some way to harass a user) and don't send them or try and ping 8000 people about them.
gollark: How would it help if discord already knows, even?

References

  1. ‘JAMES, (Arthur) Walter’, Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2013 ; online edn, Dec 2013 accessed 2 Dec 2013
  2. British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949, F W S Craig
  3. The Liberal Magazine, 1945-47
  4. http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/newsreview/features/article1177117.ece
  5. "The Times Diary". The Times. 28 March 2014. p. 11.
  6. "Walter James". The Times. 13 August 2015. p. 51.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.