William Adamson Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
William Adamson
Order:Leader of the Labour Party
Term Start:24 October 1917
Term End:14 February 1921
3Blankname:Chief Whip
3Namedata:George Henry Roberts
William Tyson Wilson
Arthur Henderson
Predecessor:Arthur Henderson
Successor:J. R. Clynes
Order1:Secretary of State for Scotland
Term Start1:7 June 1929
Term End1:24 August 1931
Primeminister1:Ramsay MacDonald
Predecessor1:Sir John Gilmour
Successor1:Archibald Sinclair
Term Start2:22 January 1924
Term End2:3 November 1924
Primeminister2:Ramsay MacDonald
Predecessor2:Ronald Munro Ferguson
Successor2:Sir John Gilmour
Order3:Member of Parliament
for West Fife
Term Start3:19 December 1910
Term End3:8 October 1931
Predecessor3:John Deans Hope
Successor3:Charles Milne
Death Date: (aged 72)
Nationality:British

William Adamson (2 April 1863 – 23 February 1936) was a Scottish trade unionist and Labour Party politician. He was Leader of the Labour Party from 1917 to 1921 and was Secretary of State for Scotland in 1924 and during 1929–1931 in the first two Labour ministries headed by Ramsay MacDonald.

Background

Adamson was born in Dunfermline, Fife, and was educated at a local dame school. He worked as a miner in Fife where he became involved with the National Union of Mineworkers. In 1902–08 he was Assistant Secretary of the Fife and Kinross Miners' Association,[1] and he thereafter served as its General Secretary.[2]

Political career

Active with the new Labour Party, Adamson was first elected to Parliament for West Fife in the December 1910 general election. His victory was the only Labour gain from the Liberals in that election.[3]

Adamson was elected Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party on 24 October 1917, a post he held until 1921.[1] He led the party into the general election of 1918, which saw Labour gain 15 seats and become the largest opposition party in the House of Commons for the first time; however, there remained uncertainty as to whether Adamson or the leader of the independent Liberals, Donald Maclean could claim to be the true leader of the opposition in the Commons.

In 1918 he was sworn into the Privy Council. In 1919, Adamson was confident that the experience of the First World War would "produce a different atmosphere and an entirely different relationship amongst all sections of our people" and would act as a watershed in the process of social reform.[4] He served as Secretary for Scotland and Secretary of State for Scotland in 1924[1] and between 1929 and 1931[1] in the Labour governments of Ramsay MacDonald.

However, he split with MacDonald after the formation of the National Government. Adamson lost his seat in the 1931 election which he contested for Labour against MacDonald's coalition.[1] He stood again in the 1935 election but again failed to take the seat, losing on this occasion to William Gallacher of the Communist Party of Great Britain.

Personal life

Adamson was married to Christina Myles Marshall (1862–1935), a factory worker, with whom he had two daughters and two sons; one of the latter was killed during the First World War.

Adamson died in February 1936, aged 72. He is buried in Dunfermline Cemetery, just north of the roundel at the end of the entrance avenue.

References

Notes and References

  1. https://spartacus-educational.com/TUadamsonW.htm Spartacus-educational.com William Adamson
  2. David Howell, Adamson, William [Willie] (1863–1936), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  3. Book: Blewett . Neal . The Peers, the Parties and the People: the General Elections of 1910 . 1972 . Macmillan . 264–265.
  4. Philip Abrams Past & Present, The Failure of Social Reform, 1918–1920’ (1963), p.49