Honorific-Prefix: | Lieutenant-Colonel The Right Honourable |
The Lord Bayford | |
Office1: | Treasurer of the Household |
Monarch1: | George V |
Primeminister1: | David Lloyd George |
Term Start1: | 1918 |
Term End1: | 1919 |
Predecessor1: | James Craig |
Successor1: | Bolton Eyres-Monsell |
Birth Date: | 20 June 1867 |
Death Date: | 24 February 1940 |
Alma Mater: | Balliol College, Oxford |
Spouse: | Lucy Halliday (m. 1893-1940) |
Robert Arthur Sanders, 1st Baron Bayford, (20 June 1867 – 24 February 1940) was an English barrister and politician.
The eldest of the three sons of Arthur Sanders, a barrister, of Fernhill, Wootton Bridge, Isle of Wight, Sanders was born at 27 Norfolk Square, Paddington, Middlesex. He was educated at Harrow and Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated with first class honours in law. He joined the Inner Temple and was called to the bar in 1891.[1]
Sanders was Conservative Member of Parliament for Bridgwater, Somerset from 1910 until 1923. During this time he also served from 1911 to 1917 as a Lieutenant-Colonel with the Royal North Devon Yeomanry, serving at Gallipoli, and in Egypt and Palestine. He was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Somerset in 1912.
He was Treasurer of the Household (Government Deputy Chief Whip in the House of Commons), 1918–1919, and a junior Lord of the Treasury from 1919 until 1921. He then held ministerial office as Under-Secretary of State for War from 1921 to 1922 and Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries from 1922 to 1924. He was created a Baronet in the 1920 New Year Honours and appointed to the Privy Council in 1922, entitling him to the style "The Right Honourable".
He sat for Wells from 1924 to 1929, when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Bayford, of Stoke Trister in the County of Somerset.
Sanders married Lucy Sophia, daughter of William Halliday, in 1893. They had one son Arthur Sanders and two daughters. As his only son committed suicide in 1920, the title became extinct on Bayford's death in February 1940, aged 72. Lady Bayford died in September 1957.[2]
Ribbon | Description | Notes |
Baronetcy (Bt) | ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
Territorial Decoration (TD) |
| |
|-