Jack Oldfield Explained

Jack Oldfield
Office:Member of Parliament
for South East Essex
Term Start:30 May 1929
Term End:7 October 1931
Predecessor:Herbert Looker
Successor:Victor Raikes
Birth Date:5 July 1899
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Doddington, Kent, England
Party:Labour (1920–1964)
Conservative (1964–1999)
Occupation:Landowner

John Richard Anthony Oldfield (5 July 189911 December 1999) was a British landowner and politician.[1] [2]

The son of Major H.E. Oldfield of the Royal Field Artillery, his father was killed in action two days before his first birthday during the Second Anglo-Boer War.[3] With his widowed mother, he moved home many times, spending much time at Doddington Place Gardens, Kent, which had been purchased by his grandfather and aunt in 1906.

Educated at Eton College, Oldfield was commissioned as an officer in the Grenadier Guards in the latter stages of the First World War. In 1920, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge. While at Cambridge, he converted from Anglicanism to Roman Catholicism. He also took an interest in social matters, and began voluntary work at Toynbee Hall in the East End of London and joined the Labour Party in the early 1920s.

At the 1929 general election he was elected as Member of Parliament for South East Essex. With the formation of the Second Labour Government he was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Air, Lord Thomson. Thomson was killed when the R101 airship crashed on its maiden voyage in October 1930, and Oldfield returned to the backbenches.

With the formation of a National Government in August 1931, the parliamentary Labour Party was divided into two factions, with supporters of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald forming the National Labour Organisation and the remaining MPs moving to the opposition benches. Oldfield chose to join the latter group, and when a general election was held in October 1931, was defeated along with most of his Labour colleagues. He attempted to regain the seat in 1935 without success.[4]

Earlier in 1931, Oldfield had been elected to the London County Council to represent Whitechapel and St George's.[5] He remained a member of the council until 1958, later representing Stepney and was vice chairman in 1954–1955.[6]

With the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Oldfield attempted to rejoin the armed forces, but was initially rejected due to his age. He eventually succeeded in enlisting as an able seaman in the Royal Navy. He finished the war with the rank of sub-lieutenant.

In 1953, he married Jonnet Elizabeth Richards, and the couple moved to Doddington, Kent. There he created a mushroom farm while his wife worked on the gardens of Doddington Place.[7] In 1964, he joined the Conservative Party and was elected to Kent County Council in the following year. He remained on the council until 1981.

He died in Doddington aged 100 in December 1999, 68 years after leaving the House of Commons.[8] He was the last surviving MP to have served during the reign of George V (1910–1936).

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: OBITUARIES: John Oldfield. Oldfield. Richard. 15 December 1999. The Independent.
  2. Web site: OLDFIELD, John Richard Anthony. December 2007. Who Was Who. Oxford University Press. 29 November 2011.
  3. Book: Conan Doyle, Arthur. Arthur Conan Doyle. The Great Boer War. 1900. Smith Elder & Co. London. 467–468.
  4. News: General Election: List Of Nominations. 5 November 1935. The Times. 8.
  5. News: L.C.C. Election . . 7 March 1931 . 8 .
  6. News: Youth Gangs In South London. Report For L.C.C. . . 4 . 14 April 1954.
  7. Web site: History. 2005. Doddington Place Gardens. 29 November 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110826150921/http://www.doddingtonplacegardens.co.uk/page/geschiedenis. 26 August 2011. dmy-all.
  8. Based on the date of the 1931 General Election being 27 October that year. Not known to have been claimed as a record.