John Bamford Slack

Bamford Slack

Sir John Bamford Slack (11 July 1857 11 February 1909) was a British politician, member of the Liberal Party and Methodist lay preacher.

Life

Slack was born in Ripley, Derbyshire in 1857. His Liberal Wesleyan Methodist parents were Mary Ann (born Bamford) and Thomas Slack. Her father made bricks and his younger sister was the temperance activist Agnes Elizabeth Slack.[1]

He was elected to the House of Commons for the division of St Albans at the St Albans by-election, 1904,[2] replacing Vicary Gibbs.

In 1905, he introduced a bill for women's suffrage, which was talked out.[3][4][5]

He received a knighthood.[6]

He married Alice Maud Mary Bretherton (died 1932), who after his death became the first wife of Sir Banister Flight Fletcher.[7]

References

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Vicary Gibbs
Member of Parliament for St Albans
1904 1906
Succeeded by
Sir Hildred Carlile


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