Denis Howell Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
Honorific-Suffix:PC
The Lord Howell
Office:Minister for Sport
Term Start:4 March 1974
Term End:4 May 1979
Primeminister:Harold Wilson
James Callaghan
Predecessor:Eldon Griffiths
Successor:Hector Monro
Term Start1:16 October 1964
Term End1:19 June 1970
Primeminister1:Harold Wilson
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Eldon Griffiths
Office2:Minister for Floods[1]
Office3:Member of Parliament
for Birmingham Small Heath
Primeminister2:James Callaghan
Birth Name:Denis Herbert Howell
Birth Date:4 September 1923
Birth Place:Birmingham, England
Death Place:Solihull, England
Party:Labour
Spouse:Brenda Marjorie Willson
Children:4
Term Start2:23 August 1976
Term Start3:23 March 1961
Term End2:3 May 1979
Term End3:16 March 1992
Predecessor2:Position established
Successor2:Position abolished
Successor3:Roger Godsiff
Predecessor3:William Wheeldon
Office4:Member of Parliament
for Birmingham All Saints
Term Start4:26 May 1955
Term End4:18 September 1959
Predecessor4:Constituency established
Successor4:John Hollingworth

Denis Herbert Howell, Baron Howell (4 September 1923 – 19 April 1998) was a British Labour Party politician. He was a councillor on Birmingham City Council between 1946 and 1956. He was the Member of Parliament for Birmingham All Saints from 1955 to 1959, and MP for Birmingham Small Heath from 1961 to 1992. In 1992, he was made a life peer and became a Member of the House of Lords.

Early life

Denis Howell was born in Lozells, Birmingham, on 4 September 1923, the son of a gasfitter and storekeeper. He was educated at Gower Street School and Handsworth Grammar School, Birmingham, and became a clerk of the Clerical and Administrative Workers Union, rising to the position of President of its expanded successor, the Association of Professional, Executive, Clerical and Computer Staff (APEX) from 1971 to 1989.

In 1951 he graduated as a linesman in the Football League, and was a Football Association referee from 1956 until 1966. In addition to being a lifelong Aston Villa fan, he was a keen cricketer.[2]

Political career

Howell claimed that his first memory was of sitting on his father's knee at a general strike meeting in 1926.[2] He joined the Labour Party in 1942, serving as a councillor on Birmingham City Council 1946–56 and as Labour Group secretary from 1950.

He contested Birmingham King's Norton in 1951. He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Birmingham All Saints from 1955 to 1959, and for Birmingham Small Heath from the 1961 by-election until his retirement in 1992. Under the Wilson and Callaghan governments, he held the role of Minister for Sport at the Department of Education and Science (1964–1969), Ministry of Housing and Local Government (1969–1970) and Department for the Environment (1974–1979), as well as a series of Environment roles (1976–1979).

On 28 October 1974, his wife and son escaped unharmed when an IRA bomb exploded in their Ford Cortina on the driveway of the family home in Birmingham.[3]

In the last week of August 1976, during Britain's driest summer in over 200 years, he was made Minister for Drought (but nicknamed 'Minister for Rain').[4] Howell was charged by the Prime Minister with the task of persuading the nation to use less water, and was even ordered by No.10 to do a rain dance on behalf of the nation.[5] Howell responded by inviting reporters to his home in Moseley in Birmingham, where he revealed he was doing his bit to help water rationing by sharing baths with his wife, Brenda.[5] Days later, heavy rainfall caused widespread flooding, and he became known as "Minister for Floods".[6] [7] Then, during the harsh winter of 1978–1979 he was appointed Minister for Snow.[8] [9]

Along with Shirley Williams, he caused controversy in 1977 by appearing on the picket line during the Grunwick dispute in North London, the scene of violent trade union protests about factory working conditions.[10]

Later life

He published his memoirs, Made in Birmingham, in 1990, and on 1 July 1992 he was made a life peer as Baron Howell, of Aston Manor in the City of Birmingham.

Howell underwent major heart surgery in 1989, but recovered sufficiently to pursue an active political career and often made his point known in the House of Lords.[10] He died in Solihull Hospital, after suffering a heart attack at a charity fund-raising dinner at the National Motorcycle Museum in Bickenhill, West Midlands, on 19 April 1998, aged 74.

Legacy

The CRUK Institute for Cancer Studies at the University of Birmingham is named after Howell.[11]

Family

His son, Andrew Howell, was elected to Birmingham City Council for Moseley and Kings Heath Ward serving as Chair of the Education Committee and as Deputy Leader. Another son, Michael, worked as a procurement manager for Highways England. His youngest son, David, was killed in a car accident on 22 May 1986 in what he described in his memoirs as the "most devastating day" in his family's lives. His Daughter Kate Howell worked in education in Birmingham. [12]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Drought (Summer 1976) and Snow (Winter 1978)
  2. Howell, Denis Herbert, Baron Howell (1923–1998), politician. Tam. Dalyell. 2004. 3 July 2018. 10.1093/ref:odnb/69605.
  3. News: ON THIS DAY - 28 October. BBC News. 4 August 2018.
  4. News: Commons Confidential: May 2006. BBC News. Nick. Assinder. 5 June 2006. 3 July 2018.
  5. News: Memories of Brum MP MP Denis Howell who changed the weather. Birmingham Mail. 5 September 2008. 4 August 2018.
  6. News: Memories of Brum MP MP Denis Howell who changed the weather . BirminghamLive . 23 October 2012 .
  7. News: Was 1976 all it's cracked up to be?. BBC News. Phil. Longman. 17 March 2004. 3 July 2018.
  8. News: Do people think heatwaves are un-British? . Easton . Mark . BBC News . 1 August 2018 .
  9. Adams . Tom . The Minister For Snow, Denis Howell, Flew Into The Region To Take A Look At Some Of The Problems They Face . Anglia Television . East Anglia Film Archive . 1979 .
  10. News: Obituaries - First sports minister dies. BBC News. 19 April 1998.
  11. Web site: Edgbaston Campus Map. University of Birmingham. 4 August 2018.
  12. Book: Howell, Denis. Made in Birmingham: The Memoirs of Denis Howell. Queen Anne Press. 22 March 1990. 371. 978-0-356-17645-1.