Thomas Gibson Bowles Explained

Office:Member of Parliament for King's Lynn
Term Start:1910
Term End:1910
Predecessor:Carlyon Bellairs
Successor:Holcombe Ingleby
Term Start1:1892
Term End1:1906
Predecessor1:Weston Jarvis
Successor1:Carlyon Bellairs
Birth Date:15 January 1841
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Algeciras, Spain
Education:King's College London
Party:Conservative
Parents:Thomas Milner Gibson
Susannah Bowles
Children:4, including George

Thomas Gibson Bowles (15 January 1841 – 12 January 1922) was a British politician and publisher. He founded the magazines The Lady and Vanity Fair, and became a Member of Parliament in 1892. He was also the maternal grandfather of the Mitford sisters.[1] [2]

Early life

Thomas Gibson Bowles was born in 1841 to Susannah Bowles, being baptised on 10 March 1841 at Christ Church, Spitalfields, London.[3] He was the illegitimate son of the politician Thomas Milner Gibson. He attended school in France and then studied for a year at King's College London. His father gave him a yearly stipend of £90 and helped him find a job at Somerset House.

Career

He began his journalism and publishing career by writing a column for the Morning Post in 1866. His coverage of the Siege of Paris sent by balloon and pigeon post ensured his fame.[4]

He borrowed £200 to found Vanity Fair in 1868. Shattered by the death of his wife Jessica (née Gordon) in childbirth, he sold his stake in Vanity Fair in 1887 for £20,000. He founded The Lady magazine in 1885, supposedly spurred by advice Jessica had once given to him. He became a competent sailor and wrote for decades in support of the Royal Navy. Bowles (nicknamed Jehu Junior after a biblical prophet who effected the downfall of his enemies) compiled the biographical notes that went with the caricatures. He was editor for twenty years and shaped magazine policy so that no-one was exempt from his enquiring eye. This approach made for an entertaining and popular magazine.[5]

The targets of Jehu Junior's satire usually considered themselves honoured to have been chosen, and although the scrutiny was acute, it was humorous rather than malicious. Bowles managed to achieve this extraordinarily difficult balancing act throughout his association with the magazine.[6]

Political career

At the 1892 general election, he was elected as Conservative Party Member of Parliament for King's Lynn and served in the House of Commons until losing his seat at the 1906 election. He was re-elected at the January 1910 as a Liberal, but lost his seat again at the December 1910 election. He stood in the 1916 Harborough by-election as an independent.[7]

Litigation

In 1912, Bowles brought (and personally argued) a claim in the High Court against the Bank of England, in which he succeed in establishing that the long-standing practice of informally collecting income tax before the act of Parliament imposing it for the year had been passed was unlawful.[8] This led to the passing of the Provisional Collection of Taxes Act 1913 (3 & 4 Geo. 5. c. 3), which for the first time authorised taxes to be collected on the basis of Budget resolutions passed by the House of Commons (a procedure that remains in place to this day).

Personal life

In 1875, he married Jessica Evans Gordon (1852–1887), daughter of Maj.-Gen. Charles Spalding Evans Gordon (1813–1901), a descendant of the Lochinvar branch of Clan Gordon, by his wife Catherine Rose, daughter of Rev. Alexander Rose and Janet Mackintosh, of Inverness. Before her death in 1887, they were the parents of:[9]

He died on 12 January 1922 while on a holiday at Algeciras, Spain, and is buried in Gibraltar.[5]

Mitford Descendants

Through his elder daughter Sydney, he was a grandfather of Nancy, Pamela, Thomas, Diana, Unity, Jessica, and Deborah Mitford.[9]

Relationship with Rita Shell

According to his granddaughter Julia Budworth, Bowles also fathered the last three of the four children of assistant Rita Shell (his children's governess, after the death of his wife Jessica Gordon), who changed her surname to Stewart. She later became editor of The Lady. They were Humphrey (b. 1891), Oliver (b. 1895) and Peter (b. 1900). Peter Stewart later assisted at Marlborough House when it was used by Queen Mary.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bowles, Thomas Gibson. The Defence of Paris: Narrated as it was Seen. 1871. S. Low, son, and Marston. en.
  2. Book: Naylor, Lonard Edwin. The Irrepressible Victorian: The Story of Thomas Gibson Bowles, Journalist, Parliamentarian and Founder Editor of the Original Vanity Fair. 1965. Macdonald. en.
  3. Baptism: https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW8H-RYY
  4. Book: Horne . Alistair . The Fall of Paris: The Siege and the Commune 1870-71 . 5 July 2007 . Penguin UK . 978-0-14-193917-9 . 3 June 2022 . en.
  5. Book: Naylor . Leonard Edwin . The Irrepressible Victorian: The Story of Thomas Gibson Bowles, Journalist . 1965 . Macdonald . 3 June 2022 . en.
  6. Book: Bowles . Thomas Gibson . The Log of the 'Nereid.' . 1889 . Simpkin, Marshall . 3 June 2022 . en.
  7. Book: NAYLOR, Leonard Edwin. The Irrepressible Victorian. The Story of Thomas Gibson Bowles, Etc. [With Plates, Including Portraits.].]. 1965. London. en.
  8. Reported at [1913] 1 Ch. 57.
  9. The House of Mitford by Jonathan Guinness with Catherine Guinness (Hutchinson, 1984)
  10. Book: Leyel . Elixers Of Life . 28 October 2013 . Routledge . 978-1-136-18538-0 . 110 . 3 June 2022 . en.
  11. Web site: Taylor. D. J.. 2003-08-14. The myth of the Mitfords. 2021-08-04. the Guardian. en.
  12. Society: Clever Daughter and Clever Father . Lady's Realm: An Illustrated Monthly Magazine . 1908 . 459 . 3 June 2022 . Hutchinson and Company . en.
  13. Book: Budworth . Julia M. . Never Forget: George F S Bowles- A Biography. . 2001 . 978-0-953-99630-8 . 616–618.