Rhodes Boyson Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable Sir
Rhodes Boyson
Office:Minister of State for Local Government
Term Start:10 September 1986
Term End:13 June 1987
Primeminister:Margaret Thatcher
Predecessor:William Waldegrave
Successor:Michael Howard
Office1:Minister of State for Northern Ireland
Term Start1:11 September 1984
Term End1:10 September 1986
Primeminister1:Margaret Thatcher
Predecessor1:The Earl of Mansfield
Successor1:Nicholas Scott
Office2:Minister of State for Social Security
Term Start2:13 June 1983
Term End2:11 September 1984
Primeminister2:Margaret Thatcher
Predecessor2:Hugh Rossi
Successor2:Tony Newton
Office3:Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education and Science
Term Start3:7 May 1979
Term End3:12 June 1983
Primeminister3:Margaret Thatcher
Predecessor3:Margaret Jackson
Successor3:Bob Dunn
Office4:Member of Parliament
for Brent North
Term Start4:28 February 1974
Term End4:8 April 1997
Predecessor4:Constituency established
Successor4:Barry Gardiner
Birth Name:Rhodes Boyson
Birth Date:11 May 1925
Birth Place:Haslingden, Lancashire, England
Death Place:Harefield, London, England
Party:Conservative
Otherparty:Labour (before 1964)
Spouse:
    Children:2 (by Burleston)
    Alma Mater:London University

    Sir Rhodes Boyson (11 May 192528 August 2012) was an English educator, author and Conservative Party politician who served as Member of Parliament for Brent North. He was knighted and made a member of the Privy Council in 1987.

    Early life

    Born in Haslingden, Lancashire, England, the son of cotton-spinner and Alderman William Boyson MBE JP, and his wife Bertha,[1] Rhodes Boyson was educated at Haslingden Grammar School, University College Cardiff, the University of Manchester, the London School of Economics, and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.

    He was awarded a PhD in 1967 by London University, his thesis being on Henry Ashworth, a Victorian Lancashire cotton manufacturer, brother-in-law of Richard Cobden, and a Radical campaigner who also had a reputation as a model employer. It was published in 1970 by Oxford University Press as The Ashworth Cotton Enterprise. The Rise and Fall of a Factory Firm. 1818–1880.[2]

    Early career

    Called up towards the end of the Second World War, Boyson served with the Royal Navy, based in India at the time of Independence, and from his late 20s, he was a Methodist lay preacher.

    He became a teacher in 1950, and later a head teacher, first at Lea Bank Secondary Modern School in Cloughfold, Rossendale (1955–61), then at Robert Montefiore Secondary School, Stepney, London (1961–66),[3] and finally from 1967 to 1974 at Highbury Grove School, a new all-boys' comprehensive in Islington, North London, of which he was the founding head teacher; in this capacity, and subsequently as an MP, he was outspoken in support of the retention of corporal punishment in British schools. He opposed what he perceived to be lax discipline, both in modern education and in the wider society, and at Highbury Grove he introduced an unfashionably traditional regime, with strictly enforced uniforms, caning for misbehaviour, and a house system. He said that this proved so popular with local parents that the school was consistently oversubscribed.[4]

    From 1957 to 1961, Boyson was a Labour councillor in Haslingden, where his father was at that time a Labour alderman and had been a trade union secretary. His father was a cotton spinner, and had been imprisoned as a conscientious objector in the First World War.

    Boyson left the Labour Party in 1964, joining the Conservative Party three years later.[5] He later wrote:

    My own move to Conservative party membership arose from the effect of my research into the cotton industry and the Manchester school of liberal economic philosophy. Here was a body of men who believed that a free enterprise economy was not only efficient but brought moral growth to all men. The employer risked his capital on his judgement and must care for his workers as part of his stock in trade, and the workers would be enabled to become prosperous and through their own industry, thrift and moral courage could establish their own business enterprises and their personal independence to the advantage of themselves, their families and society. Cobden had a moral view of society and believed that free enterprise would not only bring prosperity but social harmony at home and peace abroad within a system of universal free trade.[6]

    In 1977, he was co-author (with Brian Cox) of one of the series of Black Papers on education,[7] criticising many aspects of the comprehensive schools system.

    Boyson was a severe critic of what he regarded as the influence of "mindless sociologists" who produced "mush which has corrupted the national character", noting in 1978 that "it has not gone unnoticed that crime has increased parallel with the number of social workers". The Daily Mirror responded with an editorial comment "that crime has also increased parallel with speeches from Dr. Boyson".[8]

    He served as chairman of the National Council for Educational Standards.

    Parliamentary career

    Having stood unsuccessfully at Eccles in 1970, Boyson was first elected to the House of Commons in February 1974 for Brent North, and was Parliamentary Under-Secretary at the Department of Education and Science 1979–1983. In this capacity he sought to uphold schools' right to use the cane, and was nicknamed the "Minister for Flogging" by the anti-corporal-punishment campaign STOPP. He was Minister of State for Social Security 1983–1984, for Northern Ireland 1984–1986 and for Local Government 1986–1987.

    Boyson was a strong opponent of homosexuality,[9] and a supporter of Section 28. He said:

    It is wrong biblically, is homosexuality. It is unnatural. AIDS is part of the fruits of the permissive society. The regular one-man, one-woman marriage would not put us at risk in this way. If we could wipe out homosexual practices, then Aids would die out.[10]

    Boyson was a supporter of the Conservative Monday Club and frequently addressed them.[11] At the Conservative Party Annual Conference at Blackpool on 10 October 1991 he was the principal speaker at a Club fringe meeting on the subject of A Conservative Revolution in Education.

    In 1994, he appeared on the BBC topical panel TV show Have I Got News for You. He also appeared on Brass Eye[12] and was an early interviewee of Ali G.[13]

    Boyson lost his Brent North seat in the Labour landslide of 1997, his 24% majority turning to a 10% majority for the opposition, partly because of his perceived lack of commitment to the campaign to retain Edgware General Hospital; in 2001, the seat, no longer contested by Boyson, swung a further 9% to Labour.

    Personal life

    Distinctive personal features were his mutton chop whiskers and strong Lancashire accent. The whiskers dated from an occasion when he rebuked pupils for having long hair at the school where he was headmaster: the students retorted jokingly, "Why don't you grow your hair, Sir, if we cut ours."[14]

    In 2007, he received an honorary degree from the University of Buckingham.[15]

    Boyson married Violet Burletson in 1946, and they had two daughters. The couple divorced in 1971, after which he married Florette MacFarlane, a teacher. He and his second wife lived in Pinner, northwest London, until he moved into Cedar House nursing home in Harefield, where he died aged 87.[16] He left more than £2,000,000 in his will, the majority of it going to his widow.[17] She died in 2018.[18]

    Further reading

    External links

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    Notes and References

    1. News: Sir Rhodes Boyson obituary. Edward. Pearce. The Guardian. 30 August 2012.
    2. Eccleshall, Robert, English Conservatism Since The Restoration. An Introduction and Anthology (London: Unwin Hyman, 1990), p. 229.
    3. "BOYSON, Rt Hon. Sir Rhodes," Who's Who 2009, A & C Black, 2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2008.
    4. Boyson, Rhodes, Oversubscribed: The Story of Highbury Grove School, London, 1974.
    5. Eccleshall, p. 229.
    6. Eccleshall, pp. 230–231.
    7. Cox, C.B.; Boyson, Rhodes. "Black Paper 1977: Fight for Education", Critical Quarterly, 1234.
    8. Pearson, Geoffrey, Hooligan: A history of respectable fears, Macmillan Education, 1983.
    9. Web site: Prohibition On Promoting Homosexuality By Teaching Or By Publishing Material - Tuesday 15 December 1987 - Hansard - UK Parliament. hansard.parliament.uk.
    10. [Jeffrey Weeks (sociologist)|Weeks, Jeffrey]
    11. Book: Maor, Moshe . Political Parties and Party Systems: Comparative Approaches and the British Experience. 10 August 2005. Routledge. 978-1-134-89008-8. 205.
    12. Web site: Rhodes Boyson. IMDb.
    13. Web site: Early Ali G Interview Sir Rhodes Boyson . https://web.archive.org/web/20120830071949/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7R7dDJmwPY&gl=US&hl=en. 2012-08-30 . dead. YouTube . 3 December 2006 . 30 August 2012.
    14. Web site: Last Word, BBC Radio 4 . BBC . 7 September 2012 . 7 September 2012 .
    15. https://www.buckingham.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/winter-2007.pdf Honorary Degree for Sir Rhodes Boyson
    16. News: Sir Rhodes Boyson . The Telegraph. 29 August 2012. 30 August 2012.
    17. News: Ex-MP Rhodes Boyson's £2m. Daily Express. 3 February 2013.
    18. Web site: Florette BOYSON Obituary (2018) - London Bridge, City of London - The Times. www.legacy.com.