Florence Horsbrugh, Baroness Horsbrugh Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Baroness Horsbrugh
Honorific-Suffix:GBE PC
Office:Minister of Education
Term Start:2 November 1951
Term End:18 October 1954
Primeminister:Sir Winston Churchill
Predecessor:George Tomlinson
Successor:David Eccles
Office1:Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food
Term Start1:23 May 1945
Term End1:13 July 1945
Primeminister1:Sir Winston Churchill
Predecessor1:William Mabane
Successor1:Edith Summerskill
Office2:Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health
Term Start2:14 July 1939
Term End2:26 May 1945
Primeminister2:Neville Chamberlain
Sir Winston Churchill
Predecessor2:Robert Bernays
Successor2:Hamilton Kerr
Office3:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start3:16 December 1959
Term End3:6 December 1969
Life Peerage
Office4:Member of Parliament
for Manchester Moss Side
Term Start4:23 February 1950
Term End4:18 September 1959
Predecessor4:William Griffiths
Successor4:James Watts
Office5:Member of Parliament
for Dundee
Term Start5:27 October 1931
Term End5:15 June 1945
Alongside5:Dingle Foot
Predecessor5:Michael Marcus
Edwin Scrymgeour
Successor5:Thomas Cook
John Strachey
Birth Date:13 October 1889
Birth Place:Edinburgh, Scotland
Death Place:Edinburgh, Scotland
Occupation:Politician
Party:Conservative Party

Florence Gertrude Horsbrugh, Baroness Horsbrugh (13 October 1889 – 6 December 1969) was a Scottish Unionist Party and Conservative Party politician. The historian Kenneth Baxter has argued "in her day... [she] was arguably the best known woman MP in the UK".[1] and that she was "arguably the most successful female Conservative parliamentarian until Margaret Thatcher".[2]

Education

She was educated at Lansdowne House (Edinburgh), St Hilda's (Folkestone), and Mills College (California).

Career

During the First World War, Horsbrugh pioneered a travelling kitchen scheme in Chelsea, London, which gained sufficient renown as to warrant an invitation to bring the kitchen to Buckingham Palace one lunch hour to entertain Queen Mary, who approved particularly of the sweets.[3]

Horsbrugh was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Dundee from 1931 until her defeat in 1945. Her victory in 1931 was a surprising result, and she was the first woman to represent the city in the House of Commons and the first Conservative to be elected as a Member of Parliament for Dundee since the city gained its own constituency in 1832. At the time of her election, Dundee had not yet elected a female councillor.[1] [4] [5] In 1936 she became the first woman to move the Address in reply to the King's Speech, following which she was interviewed for television, in the process becoming the first member of parliament to appear on that medium.[6]

She unsuccessfully contested Midlothian and Peebles in 1950 and was elected in the delayed poll at Manchester Moss Side, sitting from 1950 until her retirement in 1959. Upon retirement, she was elevated to the House of Lords, as a life peer with the title Baroness Horsbrugh, of Horsbrugh in the County of Peebles, where she sat until her death.

She held ministerial office in the wartime coalition governments as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health (1939–45), and Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food (1945). She was only the second woman to hold a ministerial post in a Conservative-led government following Katherine, Duchess of Atholl.[7]

As Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Health, 1939–45, she was responsible for arranging the evacuation of schoolchildren from major cities during the war. Following her return to the House of Commons, she was the first woman to hold a Cabinet post in a Conservative government, and only the third woman, after Bondfield and Wilkinson to be appointed as a Cabinet minister in British history (1953–1954), having been appointed Minister of Education in 1951. She also served as a delegate to the Council of Europe and Western European Union from 1955 to 1960.

As part of her lifelong championing of social welfare issues, Horsbrugh took a marked interest in child welfare and introduced, as a private member, the bill which became the Adoption of Children (Regulation) Act 1939. Horsbrugh also carried out a great deal of preparatory work on the scheme which eventually became the National Health Service.

In 1945, she was a British delegate to the San Francisco Conference which established the United Nations.[8]

Awards

Horsbrugh was appointed MBE in 1920, promoted to CBE in 1939, and to GBE in 1954. She was appointed a Privy Counsellor in the 1945 New Years Honours List.

Horsbrugh was an awarded an LL.D by the University member and was also an honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.[9]

Sport

Baxter relates that Horsbrugh surprised a sports reporter who found her attending Dundee and Dundee United football matches during the 1935 election campaign. However she was a football fan and apparently supported Hearts.[6]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Baxter. Kenneth. Florence Gertrude Horsbrugh The Conservative Party's forgotten first lady. Conservative History Journal. 2009. 8. 21. 15 June 2015.
  2. Baxter. Kenneth. 'The Advent of a Woman Candidate Was Seen . . . As Outrageous': Women, Party Politics and Elections in Interwar Scotland and England. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies. November 2013. 33. 2. 268. 10.3366/jshs.2013.0079. 2 January 2016.
  3. http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FHSBR The Papers of Florence Horsbrugh, Baroness Horsbrugh
  4. Web site: MS 270 The Dundee Conservative and Unionist Association. Archive Services Online Catalogue. University of Dundee. 3 July 2015.
  5. Baxter. Kenneth. "Matriarchal" or "Patriarchal"? Dundee, Women and Municipal Party Politics In Scotland C.1918-C.1939. International Review of Scottish Studies. 2010. 35. 100–101. 10.21083/irss.v35i0.1243. 3 July 2015. free.
  6. Baxter. Kenneth. Florence Gertrude Horsbrugh The Conservative Party's forgotten first lady. Conservative History Journal. 2009. 8. 22. 23 October 2019.
  7. Book: Kenneth Baxter. Campbell. Jodi A. Ewan. Elizabeth. Parker. Heather. The Shaping of Scottish Identities: Family, Nation and the Worlds Beyond. 2011. Centre for Scottish Studies, University of Guelph. Guelph, Ontario. 978-0-88955-589-1. 150–151. Chapter Nine: Identity, Scottish Women and Parliament 1918-1979.
  8. Baxter. Kenneth. 'The Advent of a Woman Candidate Was Seen . . . As Outrageous': Women, Party Politics and Elections in Interwar Scotland and England. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies. November 2013. 33. 2. 269. 10.3366/jshs.2013.0079. 2 January 2016.
  9. Book: The Times House of Commons 1951. 1951. The Times Office. London. 80. Times51.