Walter Smiles Explained

Walter Smiles
Office:Member of Parliament
for North Down
Term Start:23 February 1950
Term End:31 January 1953
Predecessor:Constituency recreated
John Morrow Simms (1922)
Successor:Patricia Ford
Office2:Member of Parliament
for Down
Term Start2:5 July 1945
Term End2:3 February 1950
Predecessor2:Viscount Castlereagh
Successor2:Constituency Abolished
Himself (North Down)
Office3:Member of Parliament
for Blackburn
Term Start3:27 October 1931
Term End3:15 June 1945
Predecessor3:Mary Hamilton
Successor3:Barbara Castle
Birth Name:Walter Dorling Smiles
Birth Date:8 November 1883
Birth Place:Belfast, Ireland
Death Place:Donaghadee, Northern Ireland
Party:Ulster Unionist Party
Nationality:British
Children:Patricia
Profession:Soldier

Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Walter Dorling Smiles CIE DSO DL (8 November 1883 – 31 January 1953) was a Northern Irish politician.

Sir Walter was the son of William Holmes Smiles, director of Belfast Ropeworks, and grandson of Samuel Smiles. Sir Walter served during the First World War and, in the 1920s, managed a tea estate in Assam, there he became involved in local government and was a member of the Assam Legislative Council.

During the First World War; he obtained a pilots certificate but due to the lack of aircraft he transferred to Royal Naval Armoured Car Division. In 1915 he joined the British Armoured Car Expeditionary Force which was seconded to the Imperial Russian Army to fight against Turkish forces in the Caucasus Campaign. In 1918 he had reached the rank of lieutenant commander and was highly decorated; he received the DSO in 1916, with bar in 1917 and a MID, along with Russian and Romanian decorations; such as the St George of the 4th class.[1] He was Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Blackburn from 1931 to 1945. Smiles was re-elected in 1935 but stood for Down in Northern Ireland at the 1945 Westminster election, as a Unionist. The two-seat constituency was split in 1950 into North Down and South Down. Smiles won North Down that year and remained its MP until his death in 1953; he lost his life in the sinking of off Larne Lough, in the Great Storm. He was succeeded by his daughter, Patricia Ford. He is the great-grandfather of explorer Bear Grylls.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Grylls, Bear, Mud, Sweat and Tears, Channel 4, 2012
  2. http://www.thepeerage.com/p24749.htm#i247489 thepeerage.com