Harry Bernard Taylor, Baron Taylor of Mansfield, CBE, JP (18 September 1895 – 11 April 1991) was a British coalminer and politician who was a Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for 25 years. He was then a member of the House of Lords for a further 25 years.
Mining
editTaylor was from a mining family in Mansfield Woodhouse in Nottinghamshire and left school at 14 to work at the Sherwood Colliery. After working at the coalface for several years, he was promoted to be a checkweighman. He was a conscientious objector in the First World War
Politics
editA member of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain, Taylor also joined the Labour Party. He was elected to Mansfield-Woodhouse Urban District Council in 1925, also serving on the Board of Guardians. From the 1929 general election he was Election Agent for Mansfield Constituency Labour Party, and organised the successful election campaigns of Charles Brown.
Taylor kept the Mansfield seat Labour despite the electoral disaster of 1931 and in slightly more favourable times in 1935. That year he had himself been elected to Nottinghamshire County Council, and he was president of the Nottinghamshire Miners' Association in 1936–37, and vice-president of the Notts Miners' Federated Union from 1937 to 1941.
Parliament
editMansfield's Labour MP Charles Brown died just before Christmas 1940. Taylor was his obvious successor and he was elected unopposed at a by-election in April 1941. He was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Ben Smith, who was Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Aircraft Production in the wartime coalition government.
Ministerial office
editMuch of Taylor's concerns related to the welfare problems of miners and in the post-war Labour government he was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Jim Griffiths, the Minister of National Insurance. While this job normally entailed managing relations between the Minister and Parliamentary colleagues, Taylor also accompanied Griffiths on trips in the country. He was promoted to be Parliamentary Secretary in the Ministry of National Insurance in March 1950, after the 1950 general election, and served until the Labour government went out of office in October 1951.
Political outlook
editIn opposition, Taylor continued to take up issues such as workers' compensation for industrial injuries and improved welfare benefits. He often spoke on mining issues. During the Labour Party split in the early 1950s, Taylor sided with the left and Aneurin Bevan, opposing German rearmament and the development of the Hydrogen bomb. However, he was critical of the Soviet action in Hungary in 1956 and thereafter. Following the Cuban Missile Crisis, he was one of the MPs who signed a letter calling on U.S. President John F. Kennedy to withdraw Polaris and Thor missiles from the UK as a gesture in response to Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev withdrawing Soviet missiles from Cuba.
Peerage
editTaylor announced his retirement at the age of 70 in December 1965. It was announced that he would be made a life peer in the dissolution honours after the 1966 general election, and was created Baron Taylor of Mansfield, of Mansfield in the County of Nottingham on 1 June 1966.[1] He had already been appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1966 New Year Honours.[2] Taylor wrote his memoirs, "Uphill All the Way", in 1973.
House of Lords
editIn 1971 Taylor joined with Lord Blyton (another former miner MP made a Peer) to divide the House of Lords against the Industrial Relations Bill, a move of which the Labour whips did not approve. He voted for divorce reform but against legalised euthanasia. In the short Parliament of 1974 he was chosen to move the motion for an humble address in reply to the Queen's Speech. During the Common Market referendum campaign of 1975, Taylor campaigned for a 'No' vote.
He was a diligent attender in the Lords, even in his 90s. In the 1988-89 session, Taylor attended 133 of 153 sitting days.
References
edit- ^ "No. 44003". The London Gazette. 3 June 1966. p. 6457.
- ^ "No. 43854". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1966. p. 11.
- W.D. Rubinstein, "The Biographical Dictionary of Life Peers" (St Martin's Press, New York, 1991)
- M. Stenton and S. Lees, "Who's Who of British MPs" Vol. IV (Harvester Press, 1981)
- The Times