William Bridgeman, 1st Viscount Bridgeman explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Viscount Bridgeman
Honorific-Suffix:PC JP DL
Office:First Lord of the Admiralty
Primeminister:Stanley Baldwin
Term Start:6 November 1924
Term End:4 June 1929
Predecessor:The Viscount Chelmsford
Successor:A. V. Alexander
Order1:Home Secretary
Term Start1:25 October 1922
Term End1:22 January 1924
Monarch1:George V
Primeminister1:Bonar Law
Stanley Baldwin
Predecessor1:Edward Shortt
Successor1:Arthur Henderson
Office2:Secretary for Mines
Monarch2:George V
Primeminister2:David Lloyd George
Term Start2:22 August 1920
Term End2:25 October 1922
Predecessor2:Office established
Successor2:George Lane-Fox
Office3:Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade
Monarch3:George V
Primeminister3:David Lloyd George
Term Start3:10 January 1919
Term End3:22 August 1920
Predecessor3:George Wardle
Successor3:Sir Philip Lloyd-Greame
Office4:Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Labour
Monarch4:George V
Primeminister4:David Lloyd George
Term Start4:22 December 1916
Term End4:10 January 1919
Predecessor4:Office established
Successor4:George Wardle
Office5:Lord Commissioner of the Treasury
Monarch5:George V
Primeminister5:H. H. Asquith
Term Start5:30 May 1915
Term End5:5 December 1916
Predecessor5:Cecil Beck
Successor5:James Hope
Office6:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start6:18 June 1929
Term End6:14 August 1935
Hereditary peerage
Predecessor6:Peerage created
Successor6:The 2nd Viscount Bridgeman
Office7:Member of Parliament
for Oswestry
Term Start7:8 February 1906
Term End7:10 May 1929
Predecessor7:Allan Heywood Bright
Successor7:Bertie Leighton
Birth Date: 31 December 1864
Birth Place:London
Death Place:Leigh Manor, Shropshire
Nationality:British
Party:Conservative
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Cambridge
Spouse:Caroline Parker (d. 1961)

William Clive Bridgeman, 1st Viscount Bridgeman, PC, JP, DL (31 December 1864 – 14 August 1935) was a British Conservative politician and peer. He notably served as Home Secretary between 1922 and 1924. He was also an active cricketer.

Background and education

Bridgeman was born in London, United Kingdom, the son of Reverend Hon. John Robert Orlando Bridgeman, third son of the 2nd Earl of Bradford, and Marianne Caroline Clive. He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. While there he was secretary of the Pitt Club.[1]

Cricketing

While at Cambridge, he played first-class cricket for the Cambridge University Cricket Club.[2] Below first-class he played at county level for Shropshire, appearing 31 times between 1884 and 1903, achieving a century in one match with 159 runs, while playing at club level for Worthen and for Blymhill in Staffordshire. In 1931 he served as President of the Marylebone Cricket Club.[3]

Political career

Bridgeman entered a career in politics early, becoming assistant private secretary to Lord Knutsford, the Colonial Secretary (1889–1892), and then to Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, the Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1895 to 1897. In 1897 he became a member of the London School Board, and in 1904 he was elected to the London County Council. In 1906 he was elected as a member of parliament (MP) for Oswestry (a seat he previously contested at a by-election in 1904[4]), staying in this seat until his retirement in 1929. In 1909 he was appointed a member of a Royal Commission on the selection of Justices of the Peace.

In 1911, Bridgeman became an opposition whip, and became a government whip in the Asquith coalition government in 1915. From 1915 to 1916, he was Lord of the Treasury and Assistant Director of the War Trade Department. With the creation of Lloyd George's coalition in 1916, Bridgeman became Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Labour until 1919, and then Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade in 1919 and 1920, and then served as Secretary for Mines from 1920 to 1922. In these roles, Bridgeman became a devoted opponent of strikes and socialism, although he came to admire more moderate trade unionists. He was appointed to the Privy Council on 13 October 1920.

In October 1922, Bridgeman was one of the leaders of the Conservative revolt against the coalition's leadership, and he became Home Secretary in the new Conservative governments of Bonar Law and Stanley Baldwin from 1922 until January 1924. He developed here a reputation for harshness and resolve, which continued in his time as First Lord of the Admiralty from November 1924 to June 1929. Throughout, he was one of Conservative leader Stanley Baldwin's closest allies.

While outside his Admiralty brief, Bridgeman introduced, on behalf of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Randall Davidson, a Bill for a revised version of the Church of England Prayer Book in the House of Commons in 1927, following its successful passing in the House of Lords. Bridgeman made a listless speech that did not impress MPs.[5] Opposing, William Joynson-Hicks, the then Home Secretary, spoke vehemently, maintaining that the new Prayer-book opened the door to Romish practices.[6] [7] Davidson privately wrote of Bridgeman's speech, "He absolutely muffed it. It was a poor speech with no knowledge and no fire";[8] The Commons rejected the bill by 238 votes to 205.[9]

Bridgeman retired from the Commons in 1929, and on 18 June that year was created Viscount Bridgeman, of Leigh in the County of Shropshire.

Later life

In his later years, he served as chairman of various commissions and committees, as well as, briefly, Chairman of the BBC. He became Justice of Peace and Deputy Lieutenant of Shropshire, and received an Honorary Doctor of Law from the University of Cambridge in 1930.

Family

Lord Bridgeman married Caroline Beatrix Parker, daughter of Hon. Cecil Thomas Parker and Rosamond Esther Harriet Longley, daughter of the Most Rev. Charles Thomas Longley, Archbishop of Canterbury, in Eccleston, Chester, on 30 April 1895. They had four children:

Lord Bridgeman died in Leigh Manor, Shropshire, on 14 August 1935, aged 70, and was buried in the churchyard at Hope near Minsterley three days later. The Viscountess Bridgeman died in December 1961.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fletcher . Walter Morley . Walter Morley Fletcher . The University Pitt Club: 1835–1935 . First Paperback . 2011 . 1935 . . Cambridge . 978-1-107-60006-5 . 89 .
  2. https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/28/28123/28123.html CricketArchive: William Bridgeman
  3. Book: Percival, Tony. Shropshire Cricketers 1844-1998. 1999. A.C.S. Publications, Nottingham. 8, 41. 1-902171-17-9. Published under Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians.
  4. Who Was Who
  5. Book: Bell, George . Randall Davidson: Archbishop of Canterbury, Volume II . 1935 . London . Oxford University Press . 1345 . 896112401.
  6. Bell (Volume II), pp. 1345–1346
  7. "House of Commons", The Times, 16 December 1927, p. 7
  8. Private Papers of Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury 1903–28, vol. xvi, Diaries and Memoranda, 1927–1930, Memorandum of 15 January 1928, pp. 11–12, quoted in Martell, p. 218
  9. Bell (Volume II), p. 1346