William Dobbie (politician) explained

Honorific-Prefix:Alderman
William Dobbie
Honorific-Suffix:CBE
Office:Lord Mayor of York
Term Start:1947
Term End:1948
Predecessor:Fred Gaines
Successor:John Bowes Morrell
Term Start1:1923
Term End1:1924
Predecessor1:James Brown Inglis
Successor1:Robert Kay
Office2:Member of Parliament
for Rotherham
Term Start2:27 February 1933
Term End2:3 February 1950
Predecessor2:George Herbert
Successor2:John Henry Jones
Office3:City of York Councillor
Term Start3:1911
Term End3:1950
Birth Date:1878
Birth Place:Maybole, Scotland
Death Date:19 January 1950
Death Place:York, England

William Dobbie CBE (1878 – 19 January 1950[1]) was a British Labour Party politician.

Dobbie was born in Maybole, Ayrshire. When he was just two-years-old, his parents, Francis Dobbie and Agnes McCreath, died there leaving two young sons, William and his brother James aged six. James remained in Maybole with his maternal grandparents while William was raised in Glasgow by his aunt.

Dobbie became a railway employee and moved to York and became a councillor in 1911. He became active in the General Railway Workers' Union, and was its president in 1913, when it became part of the National Union of Railwaymen (NUR).[2] During World War I, he served in the British Army and was wounded. After the war he became an alderman of York and in 1923 was elected Lord Mayor of York, the first Labour mayor of the city. He was President of the NUR from 1925 to 1927 and 1931–1933.

Dobbie stood for Parliament without success for Barkston Ash in 1924 and Clitheroe in 1929 before being elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Rotherham in a by-election in 1933. In 1936, during the Spanish Civil War, Dobbie visited the Alcazar, a military academy under siege by Republican troops. Willie Forrest, who arrived in a chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce requisitioned from a Royalist nobleman said of the occasion, "I took William Dobbie, a visiting Labour MP, up a church tower from which you get a wonderful view of the Alcazar's courtyard. There was a machine-gun in the tower and Dobbie couldn't resist the temptation to fire it at the fascists."[3] William Dobbie later served a second term as Lord Mayor in 1947 and in the same year was made a CBE (it is said he refused a knighthood), remaining a Member of Parliament until his death.

References

  1. Web site: Mr William Dobbie (Hansard).
  2. Book: Hills. R. I.. The Inevitable March of Labour?: Electoral Politics in York, 1900-1914. 27.
  3. Mitchell, D. The Spanish Civil War. p.59