John Frederick Lees Explained

John Frederick Lees
Birth Place:Oldham, Lancashire
Death Place:Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
Occupation:Politician
Relatives:Dame Sarah Lees
Party:Liberal Conservative
Office:Member of Parliament for Oldham
Predecessor:William Cobbett
Successor:William Augustus Johnson
Term Start:1835
Term End:1837

John Frederick Lees (1809 – 1867)[1] was a British landowner and Liberal Conservative politician who represented Oldham in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom as a Member of Parliament from 1835 to 1837.

Biography

Lees was the grandson of a cotton manufacturer,[2] a local mill-owner,[3] mine-owner,[4] and landowner: the Lord of the manor of Oldham[5] and an Oxford graduate,[6] but was dismissed as "a gentleman... qualified neither by age nor ability to fulfill the duties of a member of the imperial parliament" by the Manchester Times.[7] Hansard reports him to have made no speeches in Parliament during his term.[8]

Politics

Thanks to internal squabbles (principally over the desired relationship between the state and the Anglican church) amongst the Radicals of Oldham,[9] he was elected as a 'Liberal Conservative' at a by-election caused by the death of William Cobbett, narrowly defeating John Morgan Cobbett (Cobbett's son) after another Radical candidate (Feargus O'Connor) withdrew on the first morning of the poll.[10] Lees attributed his victory to the absence of the organised 'intimidation system' he claimed had been practiced in the previous contested election (that of 1832).[11] By the general election of 1837 the Radicals had regrouped, and Lees came bottom of the poll:[12] this he attributed to the return of intimidation and 'exclusive dealing'.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Deaths. Blackburn Standard. 25 September 1867. 3.
  2. Book: The Admission Register of the Manchester School with some Notices of the more Distinguished Scholars. 1874. Manchester University Press. 150–. GGKEY:LJ44YNJ692P. - entry for Edward Lees
  3. News: Oldham - Cotton Mill Burnt. Manchester Times. 5 December 1840. 3.
  4. News: Oldham, September 23, 1836: Explosion of Fire-damp - Shocking Accident. Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 24 September 1836. 3.
  5. News: News of the Neighbouring Towns - Oldham- Turnpike Roads. Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 7 June 1851. 8.
  6. News: Marriages. Preston Chronicle. 24 December 1831. 3.
  7. News: Representation of Oldham. Manchester Times. 4 July 1835. 3.
  8. Web site: People: Mr John Lees. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard).
  9. the divisions between Oldham Radicals are explored at length in Web site: Bickerstaffe. Derek. Politic and party organisation in Oldham. Durham E-Theses Online. Durham University. 1964. 25 February 2016. ; pages 31-59 cover the period 1832-7
  10. Book: The Spectator. 1835. F.C. Westley. 651.
  11. News: Oldham Operative Conservative Association. Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 7 January 1837. 4.
  12. News: Local Intelligence - Oldham. Manchester Times. 29 July 1837. 3.
  13. News: Oldham Conservative Festival. Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 January 1838. 3.