Patricia McLaughlin | |
Constituency Mp: | Belfast West |
Term Start: | 26 May 1955 |
Term End: | 25 September 1964 |
Primeminister: | Anthony Eden |
Predecessor: | Jack Beattie |
Successor: | James Kilfedder |
Birth Name: | Florence Patricia Alice Aldwell |
Birth Date: | 23 June 1916 |
Birth Place: | Downpatrick, County Down, Ireland |
Party: | Ulster Unionist |
Florence Patricia Alice McLaughlin OBE (née Aldwell; 23 June 1916 – 7 January 1997) was a unionist politician in Northern Ireland and one of the earliest female Members of Parliament (MPs) from the region.[1]
McLaughlin was educated at Ashleigh House and Trinity College, Dublin before going on to join the Ulster Unionist Party.[1]
Chosen to represent the party in the West Belfast constituency for the 1955 general election, she captured the seat from incumbent Jack Beattie and went on to successfully defend it at the 1959 election before retiring from politics.[1] She made a surprise comeback in the 1970 general election as the Conservative Party candidate in Wandsworth Central, although she failed to win the seat.[1] She was also a founding member of the Westminster women's Orange Lodge.
On 13 January 1958 she visited Crumlin Road Prison in Belfast where Irish Republican Army (IRA) inmate Eamonn Boyce noted in Irish in his diary entry from that date that she was inside 'looking at the animals!'.[2]
She was awarded the OBE in 1965.[1]