Frances Henrietta Stewart

Frances Henrietta Stewart OBE (1883 – 26 September 1962), was a British politician and supporter of Indian nationalism.

A Liberal candidate in 1929 by a poster of Lloyd George

Background

She was born as Frances Henrietta Rickards, the daughter of Arthur G. Rickards, KC. She had a private education. In 1906 she married Francis Hugh Stewart, a Calcutta merchant. That year, she returned with him to India, where they lived and raised a family. They had three sons and four daughters. In 1916, her husband was knighted, which gave her the title of Lady Stewart. They returned to Britain in 1919. Sir Francis died in 1921.[1]

Political career

She joined the Liberal Party. She was an advocate of Indian independence and served as Honorary Secretary of the National Indian Association. She also took an active interest in infant and school welfare work.[2]She was Liberal candidate for the Kensington North Division of London at the 1929 General Election. It was not a promising seat for the Liberals who had not won since 1906. She finished in third place;

Kensington North in the County of London, showing boundaries used in 1929
General Election 30 May 1929: Kensington, North[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourFielding Reginald West19,70148.4+1.4
ConservativePercy George Gates15,51138.1-14.9
LiberalLady Frances Henrietta Stewart5,51613.5N/A
Majority4,19010.3
Turnout59,50068.5-1.1
Labour gain from ConservativeSwing+8.2

In 1930 she left the Liberals to join the Labour Party,[4] and she stood unsuccessfully in Balham and Tooting at the 1931 London County Council election.[5] In September 1931, when the Labour Party split over support for the National Government, she followed Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald and joined the National Labour Party. She attempted to run as a National Labour candidate in Kensington North at the 1931 General Election but when it became clear that supporters of the National Government were uniting behind the Conservative candidate, she withdrew.[6] she continued to support the National Labour Party throughout the 1930s. She did oppose the National Government's Nazi appeasement policy; In early 1939, before war broke out, she advocated the introduction of conscription and increased arms spending to counter the Nazi threat.[7] In 1939 she was awarded the OBE.

References