David Campbell (Belfast South MP) explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
Sir David Campbell
Constituency Mp:Belfast South
Term Start:4 November 1952
Term End:12 June 1963
Predecessor:Conolly Gage
Successor:Rafton Pounder
Birth Date:29 January 1891
Nationality:British
Party:Ulster Unionist Party

Sir David Callender Campbell, (29 January 1891 – 12 June 1963) was an Ulster Unionist politician in Northern Ireland.

Campbell was born in Cudappah, India where his father William Howard Campbell was a missionary working with the London Missionary Society. The third of four sons of whom the youngest, William, died of malaria on the way to England in 1894, David studied at Foyle College before going to Edinburgh University. David joined the colonial services in 1919 and served in Tanganyika and then served as deputy chief secretary in Uganda. He then became a secretary in Gibraltar and acting Lieutenant Governor of Malta. He returned and stood as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Belfast South in a 1952 by-election, and after election, served until his death in 1963. In 1959 while leader of the UUP Westminster MP's, he became involved in the row over Catholic membership of the UUP when he supported the idea in a letter to the party leader.[1]

He served as Lieutenant-Governor of Malta, 1943–1952 and as a member of the Privy Council from 1962.

Notes and References

  1. Walker, Graham, A history of the Ulster Unionist Party, Manchester University Press 2004. pg 148