Time Period: 1929-1956
Nancy Seear (Lady Seear), 1913-1997
When Lady Violet Bonham Carter died in 1969, the Liberal Party lost its most powerful and indomitable female campaigner. The vacuum she left was filled by Beatrice Nancy Seear, always known by her middle name, a formidable politician possessed of a towering intellect. Seear was an active Liberal and latterly Liberal Democrat for over fifty…
Vision in a time of crisis
Ernest Simon and the revitalising of Liberalism in the 1920s and 1930s.
T. Edmund Harvey
Liberal politician of conscience and one of only 16 MPs to have sat in the House of Commons in both world wars.
Back from the dead: the Liberal Party in the 1950s
In 1951, the Liberal Party’s existence was in grave doubt. At the October general election, the party contested a mere 109 seats, and only six MPs were returned. The party was badly divided over basic questions of strategy, and membership and morale were low. The late 1950s saw an upturn in the Liberals’ fortunes. In…
Some cornerstones still in place
The endurance of British Liberalism, 1945–1955.
What Honor did next
The pioneering broadcasting career of Honor Balfour (1912–2001).
Another Madam Mayor
Lady Howard of Llanelli and the strange case of the Cowell-Stepneys.