George Woods (British politician) explained

George Woods
Office1:Member of Parliament for Droylsden
Term1:1950-1951
Office2:Member of Parliament for Mossley
Term2:1945-1950
Office3:Member of Parliament for Finsbury
Term3:1935-1945
Party:Labour and Co-operative
Birth Date:13 September 1886
Death Place:York, England
Education:Handsworth College
Manchester College, Oxford

The Reverend George Saville Woods (13 September 1886 – 9 July 1951) was a British Unitarian minister and Labour and Co-operative politician.[1] [2]

Biography

The son of Thomas William and Alice Antice Woods, he was educated at Handsworth College, Birmingham and Manchester College, Oxford. From 1914 to 1921 Woods served as minister at Mary Street Chapel, Taunton, Somerset, and from 1921 as minister of York Unitarian Chapel.

He became active in the co-operative movement and labour politics, holding at different times the chairmanship of the Taunton Labour Party, the York Labour Party and the York Co-operative Society. He was elected to the York Board of Guardians and York City Council. In 1929 and 1931 he fought the Yorkshire seat of Barkston Ash but could not defeat the Conservative candidate.

At the 1935 general election he was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Finsbury in London, unseating George Masterman Gillett of the National Labour Organisation. Due to the Second World War, the next election was not held until 1945. Woods was elected as MP for Mossley in Lancashire. When the Mossley seat was abolished in 1950, he was elected for the new seat of Droylsden, and was its member at the time of his death in a York hospital in July 1951, aged 64.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: WOODS, Rev. George Saville. December 2007. Who Was Who. Oxford University Press. 21 November 2011.
  2. News: Obituary: The Rev. G. S. Woods, M.P.. 11 July 1951. The Times. 8.