Appleby by-election, 1905

The Appleby by-election was a Parliamentary by-election. It returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system.

Vacancy and electoral history

Richard Rigg had been Liberal MP for the seat of Appleby since the 1900 General Election. Rigg aged only 23, had a large majority of 11.4%. This was a surprise, since Appleby had previously returned only Conservatives since 1885. The result at the last election was as follows;

General Election January 1900[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Richard Rigg 2,835 55.7
Conservative Sir Joseph Savory 2,256 44.3
Majority 579 11.4
Turnout 5,091
Liberal gain from Conservative Swing

Rigg resigned from the Liberal party on 25 November 1904 because he found himself in agreement with the Conservative government on so many key issues.

Candidates

When Rigg announced his resignation from the Liberal Party he also announced his intention to resign his seat and seek re-election as a Conservative.[2] However, the local Conservative Association had already selected 46-year-old Major George Noble as their candidate to re-gain the seat at the next general election. Noble was the heir to his father's baronetcy. He had been educated at Harrow School and Sandhurst Military Academy. He was in the 13th Hussars, fought at Lucknow and served in the South African War being invalided home in 1901.[3] Noble was not willing to stand down and allow Rigg a straight fight against a new Liberal candidate. Rigg thus found himself in a difficult situation. The Conservatives had already chosen a candidate and the Liberals were selecting his replacement. Faced with this dilemma, he decided not to resign his seat but to go abroad. He claimed that the “ruffianism” of Liberals angry at his defection of the party had made him ill, and he went to an unnamed continental health resort to recover.[4]

Leif Jones

On 14 December 1904, the local Liberal Association selected 42-year-old Leif Jones as their new candidate to hold the seat. Born Leifchild Stratten Jones on 16 January 1862 in St Pancras, London, the fifth of the six children of the Reverend Thomas Jones (1819–1882), an Independent clergyman, formerly of Morriston, Swansea, and Jane Jones, daughter of John Jones of Dowlais. His older siblings were David Brynmor (b. 1851), Annie, John Viriamu (b. 1862) and Irvonwy; his younger brother was Morlais Glasfryn. His brothers David Brynmor Jones and John Viriamu Jones would both achieve prominence in public life. In 1867, when Leifchild was five years old, his mother died, and in 1869 his father left London, for health reasons, moving firstly back to Swansea (1870–1877) and afterwards to Melbourne, Australia (1877–1880), where Leifchild was educated at Scotch School. Afterwards Leifchild became a student at Trinity College, Oxford.[5] He was Private Secretary to the Countess of Carlisle, a prominent prohibitionist campaigner.[6] As a temperance campaigner Leif Jones was sometimes referred to as 'Tea-leaf Jones'. He was an experienced candidate having previously fought Westminster in 1892, Leeds Central in 1895 and Manchester South in 1900. He started to work the constituency even though Rigg had yet to resign from parliament.

Rigg returned to England in February 1905, and resigned his seat on 11 February 1905 by becoming Steward of the Manor of Northstead.[7] He told the Annual Dinner of the Carlisle Conservative Club "I am proud to be one of you now ... I have the satisfaction of feeling that what I have done was conscientious and right."[4] He had also decided not to contest the subsequent by-election.

Campaign

Polling Day was fixed for 2 March 1905, just 19 days after Rigg's resignation. The weather during the campaign saw rain and snow.

Jones launched his campaign by condemning the Chinese Labour Act, the Education Act 1902 and Joseph Chamberlain's fiscal proposals.[8] The main national issue at the time was the decision of the Unionist Government to abandon free trade to advocate the introduction of tariff reform. Noble launched his campaign by not fully endorsing Chamberlain's tariff reform programme, stating he was opposed to any fiscal scheme that would raise the price of food.[9]

Result

The Liberals held the seat from the Conservatives;

Leif Jones
Appleby by-election, 1905[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Leifchild Stratten Jones 2,922 52.0
Conservative George John William Noble 2,702 48.0
Majority 220 4.0
Turnout 5,624
Liberal hold Swing

Even though women did not have the vote, disappointed Tories blamed them for their defeat. “There can be no shadow of doubt,” declared Josceline Bagot, Conservative MP for neighbouring Kendal, “that Major Noble’s defeat was caused by the efforts of wives who feared the introduction of protection.” A month after the by-election, Noble wrote to Appleby Conservatives that “his health had failed” and his doctors had sent him on vacation to Gibraltar and Tangier.

Aftermath

In October 1905 Noble had made the long-expected announcement that he would not stand, blaming “my own shortcomings as a candidate”. The Conservatives chose a new candidate but Jones clung on to the set by just 3 votes;

General Election January 1906[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Leifchild Stratten Jones 2,894 50.0
Conservative Earl of Kerry, Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice 2,891 50.0
Majority 3 0.0
Turnout 5,785
Liberal hold Swing

References

  1. 1 2 3 Liberal Year Book 1908
  2. "There is to be another by-election, this time in." Times [London, England] 25 November 1904: 7. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 3 February 2015.
  3. ‘NOBLE, Sir George (John William)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 3 February 2015
  4. 1 2 "When election fever gripped Appleby". Cumberland and Westmorland Herald. 12 March 2005. Retrieved 16 January 2010.
  5. thepeerage.com Leifchild Stratten Leif-Jones, 1st and last Baron Rhayader
  6. Entry on Leif Jones in Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History: Volume I.
  7. Department of Information Services (9 June 2009). "Appointments to the Chiltern Hundreds and Manor of Northstead Stewardships since 1850" (PDF). House of Commons Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 February 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
  8. "Election Intelligence." Times [London, England] 15 December 1904: 6. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 3 February 2015.
  9. "Election Intelligence." Times [London, England] 18 February 1905: 10. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 3 February 2015.
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