Sir Richard Winfrey (8 August 1858- 18 April 1944) was a British Liberal politician, newspaper publisher and campaigner for agricultural rights.
Contents |
Winfrey was born at Long Sutton in Lincolnshire on 5 August 1858. He married Annie Lucy Pattinson of Ruskington, Lincolnshire in 1897. His wife's brothers, Samuel Pattinson (1870–1942) and Sir Robert Pattinson (1872–1954) were both Liberal MPs; Samuel for Horncastle from 1922–24 and Robert for Grantham from 1922-23.[1] In religion Winfrey was a Congregationalist.[2] He died on 18 April 1944 in Castor House, Castor, Peterborough.
In 1887, Richard Winfrey purchased the Spalding Guardian, a local newspaper that was to provide the basis for the Winfrey family's newspaper interests. His next purchase was the Lynn News; he also started the North Cambs Echo and bought the Peterborough Advertiser. During World War II Winfrey's newspaper interests began to be passed over to his son, Richard Pattinson Winfrey (1902–1985) who himself unsuccessfully stood in the Holland with Boston by-election in 1924.[3] In 1947, under the direction of Pat Winfrey, the family's newspaper titles were consolidated to form the East Midland Allied Press, now the emap media group.[4]
Winfrey first contested South West Norfolk as a Liberal at the general election of 1895 and tried again in 1900. He was elected Liberal MP for South West Norfolk at the 1906 Liberal landslide election and he held the seat until 1923. He also represented Gainsborough from 1923-24. His first career had been as a chemist, and he steered the Poisons and Pharmacy Act 1908 through Parliament.
Between 1906-1910 Winfrey served as Parliamentary Secretary to Earl Carrington and Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Agriculture from 1916-1918.
In August 1914 as Mayor of Peterborough he was one of the last to read the Riot Act after anti-German disturbances.[5]
Winfrey was knighted in the 1914 New Year's Honours. He also served as a Justice of the Peace. He was Chairman of the Lincolnshire and Norfolk Small Holdings Association, Ltd[6] and sometime Chairman of the National Educational Association.[7] At its foundation in 1906 he was Treasurer of the Eastern Counties Agricultural Labourers & Small Holders Union which in 1920 became the National Union of Agricultural and Allied Workers.
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Sir Thomas Leigh Hare |
Member of Parliament for South West Norfolk 1906–1923 |
Succeeded by Alan McLean |
Preceded by John Elsdale Molson |
Member of Parliament for Gainsborough 1923–1924 |
Succeeded by Harry Crookshank |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by The Duke of Marlborough The Viscount Goschen |
Joint Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries with The Lord Clinton 1918–1919 |
Succeeded by Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen |