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John Banfield

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Name
  
John Banfield


John William Banfield (August 1875 – 25 May 1945) was a British trade unionist and Labour Party politician, who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Wednesbury from 1932 until his death in 1945.

Contents

Early life

Banfield was born in 1875, the son of son of Frederick Charles Bansfield (c.1855–1898), a porter and tinsmith, and Mary Ann Simnett. He worked as a confectioner and baker was General Secretary of the Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers, Confectioners and Allied Workers from 1915 until he retired in 1940.

Political career

Banfield unsuccessfully contested the 1918 general election in Birmingham Aston. When the Labour Party unexpectedly gained control of Fulham Borough Council in 1919 they added Banfield to the Aldermanic bench to add political and trade union expertise.

Banfield was a government delegate representing the work people at Geneva from 1924 to 1925. He was unsuccessful in Fulham West at a by-election in 1930 and at the 1931 general election.

In 1932, the Conservative MP for Wednesbury, Viscount Ednam succeeded to the peerage as Earl of Dudley, triggering a by-election in July 1932. Banfield was selected as Labour's candidate, hoping to regain a seat which had been held by Labour from 1918 to 1931.

After a campaign focusing on the means test for unemployment benefit (in a constituency with 12,000 unemployed), Banfield won the Wednesbury 1932 by-election, defeating Conservative Rex Davis. He was re-elected at the 1935 general election.

In December 1936, he delivered an address, 'Sunday: An M.P.'s Convictions' at the Alliance Birthday Celebrations of the Imperial Alliance for the Defence of Sunday, arguing that Sunday should be a day of rest and worship. In June 1937, he made a speech in Parliament, proposing the addition of a clause to the Factories Bill: Prohibition of night work in bakehouses. His campaigning led to him being known as "the bakers' MP".

Banfield died aged 69, in Hammersmith, London of a heart attack shortly before the 1945 general election.

Personal life and legacy

On 5 September 1897, he married Annie Elizabeth Newman, daughter of baker John Newman, in Birmingham. A block of council flats, William Banfield House in Munster Road, Fulham, SW6 was named after him. His son, Frank Walter Banfield (14 August 1905–31 March 1970), served the borough for 26 years, as a councillor, Mayor of Fulham (1952-1953), Vice Chairman of the London County Council (1953-1954) and GLC member. He was an Alderman of the Greater London Council from 1964 until his death in 1970. Frank Banfield Park in Fulham Palace Road was named after him in October 1975.

References

William Banfield Wikipedia