Mavis Constance Tate
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Mavis Constance Tate was born Maybird Hogg on 17th August 1893. Her first marriage, to Captain G. H. Gott, lasted from 1915 until their divorce in 1925. Her second marriage, to Henry Tate, lasted from 1925 to their divorce in 1944. She died on 5th June 1947.
As a member of the Conservative Party, she was elected MP for West Willesden in 1931. In 1935, however, she moved to the constituency of Frome.
She was an early member of Archibald Ramsay's Right Club from its founding in May 1939. However, she renounced her pro-German beliefs in late 1940, shortly after a nervous breakdown.
She chaired the Womens Power Committee of 1941 and the Equal Pay Campaign Committee of 1942 and was vocal on the subject of equal pay for women as part of the war effort.
Shortly after the end of World War II, she travelled with nine others to visit the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany to report on the result of the atrocities there. She narrated the newsreel of this visit for British Pathé.
She lost her seat in the 1945 General Election.