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Ryland Adkins

Sir William Ryland Dent Adkins (11 May 1862 – 30 January 1925) was an English barrister, judge and Liberal politician.

Ryland Adkins

Family and education edit

Ryland Adkins, as he was known at least professionally, was the son of William Adkins JP of Springfield, Northampton and his wife Harriet (née Dent) of the Manor House, Milton, Northampton.[1] He was educated at Mill Hill School, University College, London where he obtained a BA degree [2] and Balliol College, Oxford where he won a History Exhibition.[3] He was an ardent Free churchman and was an active member of the Congregational Union.

Career edit

Adkins studied for the law and in 1890 was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple.[4] He practised on the Midland circuit,[5] took silk in 1920 and sat occasionally as a Commissioner of Assize. He served as Recorder of Nottingham from 1911 to 1920. From 1920 until his death he sat as Recorder of Birmingham. He was knighted in 1911.[1]

Politics edit

Northamptonshire politics edit

Adkins was an original member of Northamptonshire County Council at its creation in 1889. He was for many years its Vice Chairman and became Chairman of the County Council in 1920. He was also Vice-Chairman of the Northamptonshire Territorial Force Association and played an important role in recruiting during the First World War.[6] He later served as Chairman of the Executive Council of the Association of County Councils. He was created Deputy Lieutenant of Northamptonshire in 1922 and served for many as a JP for the county and Borough of Northampton.[1] Adkins was proud of his Northamptonshire heritage and was the author of a book about the county in 1893 and a contributor to a number of others including the Victoria History of the County.

Parliament edit

Adkins was first elected to Parliament at the 1906 general election as Liberal MP for Middleton, Lancashire in a straight fight with the Unionists by a majority of 1,533 votes.

General election January 1906: Middleton[7][page needed] Electorate 14,314
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Ryland Adkins 7,018 56.1 +
Conservative Cyril CH Potter 5,485 43.9 -
Majority 1,533 12.2
Turnout 87.3
Liberal gain from Conservative Swing +

He held the seat in the January 1910 general election.

General election January 1910: Middleton[7] Electorate 15,391
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Ryland Adkins 7,669 55.0 -1.1
Conservative Patrick Rose-Innes 6,266 45.0 +1.1
Majority 1,403 10.0 -2.2
Turnout 90.5 +3.2
Liberal hold Swing -1.1

Adkins held his seat again in a straight fight against a Liberal Unionist candidate, this time with a majority of 1,403 and in December 1910 with a majority of 787.

General election December 1910: Middleton[7] Electorate 15,391
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Ryland Adkins 7,071 52.9 -2.1
Liberal Unionist William Hewins 6,284 47.1 +2.1
Majority 787 5.8 -4.2
Turnout 86.8 -3.7
Liberal hold Swing -2.1

Middleton by-election, 1911 edit

In 1911 upon his appointment as Recorder of Nottingham, Adkins was obliged by the electoral law of the day to resign his seat and re-contest it at a by-election held on 2 August 1911. His candidature was opposed by the Conservatives. W A S Hewins who was his opponent at the December 1910 general election and who had reduced his majority from 1,403 votes in January 1910 to 787 in December, stood against him again.[8] The by-election was fought mainly on the issue of National Insurance which Hewins took up vigorously, if by some accounts rather cynically. In the course of the campaign Lloyd George had to send Adkins a letter for public consumption refuting in detail Hewins’ claims. Despite the strong attack however Adkins held on, although Hewins reduced his majority again, this time to 411 votes.[9]

1911 Middleton by-election[7] Electorate 15,447
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Sir Ryland Adkins 6,863 51.5 -1.4
Liberal Unionist William Hewins 6,452 48.5 +1.4
Majority 411 3.0 -2.8
Turnout 86.2 -0.6
Liberal hold Swing -1.4

The Marconi Scandal edit

Adkins played a cameo role in the Marconi scandal which broke in the summer of 1912. It was alleged that highly placed members of H H Asquith’s Liberal government, notably Lloyd George and Rufus Isaacs, had profited by improper use of information about the Government's intentions with respect to the Marconi Company. Knowing that the government was about to issue a lucrative contract to the British Marconi company, they had bought shares in an American subsidiary. In the end Parliament did not wish to see these ministers brought down over their involvement in an affair from which they had not profited unduly and it was their political judgment rather than their honour which was questioned. Adkins was chosen by the government Whips to move an amendment to a motion of censure on the issue which accepted the ministers’ expressions of regret and acquitted them of acting in bad faith and of charges of corruption.[10]

1918 General Election edit

The 1918 general election was known as the ‘coupon election’ after the letter of endorsement sent to candidates supporting the coalition government of David Lloyd George. Adkins had been regarded as supporter of H H Asquith during the war and in the split in the Liberal Party occasioned by Lloyd George's replacement of Asquith as prime minister. He opposed the introduction of conscription and he voted with Asquith and against Lloyd George in the Maurice Debate of May 1918. Despite all this he received the Coalition ‘coupon’ for the 1918 general election and thereafter acted in Parliament as a Lloyd George Liberal.[11] Adkins’ Middleton seat had disappeared in a boundary revision for this election and he had been adopted as Liberal candidate for the new Middleton and Prestwich constituency. As a result of receiving the ‘coupon’ Adkins did not face a Conservative opponent at the general election and held his seat comfortably with a majority of 8,330 over Labour.[12]

Middleton and Prestwich by-election, 1920 edit

Adkins had to go through the by-election process again in 1920 on his appointment as Recorder of Birmingham. At this by-election however he was returned unopposed as a result of an electoral truce called because of an outbreak of smallpox in Middleton and the recommendation of the medical authorities that door to door canvassing and public meetings should be avoided.[13]

1922–1924 edit

In 1922, Adkins fought Middleton and Prestwich as a National Liberal. Although Lloyd George had been ousted as prime minister as a result of the decision of Conservative MPs at the Carlton Club meeting of 19 October 1922 to withdraw from the coalition, Adkins did not face Unionist opposition in 1922. In a straight fight with Labour candidate Matthew Burrow Farr, he held the seat by a majority of 4,327 votes.

By the time of the 1923 general election however, things had changed. A degree of Liberal reunion had taken place with both the Lloyd George and Asquithian wings of the party agreeing to fight the election together in defence of the traditional Liberal policy of Free Trade which the new prime minister Stanley Baldwin had chosen to be the central issue in the campaign. The Tories had recovered their organisation in Middleton and they adopted Sir Nairne Stewart-Sandeman as their candidate. Adkins was also opposed again by Farr for Labour and in a close three-cornered fight he just failed to hold his seat by the margin of 529 votes (or 1.9% of the poll).[14][incomplete short citation][page needed] Stewart-Sandeman's victory was the first recorded Conservative gain of the election.[15]

Adkins attempted to regain the seat at the 1924 general election. But by this time the electorate was increasingly coming to see British politics through its traditional two-party lens, with the realistic choice for government being between Conservative or Labour parties. In a three-cornered contest with Stewart-Sandeman and Farr, Adkins came bottom of the poll with 21.7% of the votes cast.[14][incomplete short citation][page needed]

Other public appointments edit

During his political career Adkins served on many different committees and public inquiries as an appointee of the government. The following are examples of his more important commissions.

Drunkenness law edit

In 1908 he was appointed by the Home Secretary to sit on a committee to investigate the operation of the law in relation to inebriates (drunkenness).[16]

Isle of Man constitution edit

In 1911 he was appointed a member of the Home Office Committee of Inquiry into the constitutional crisis in the Isle of Man,[17] which arose out of dispute between the Lieutenant Governor of the Isle of Man, the Island's Legislative Council and the British Home Office on the one side and the members of the House of Keys on the other, on the question of where responsibility for the passing of money bills should sit, with the Keys asserting primacy as the elected representatives of the Manx people.[18]

Electoral Reform edit

Adkins also sat as a member of the Speaker's Conference on Electoral Reform of 1917–1918, which looked amongst other things at the proposals for votes for women which came into effect for the 1918 general election.[19] The conference also proposed the ending of plural voting and the introduction of proportional representation in large urban areas [20] but these were among the recommendations not introduced.

Pensions edit

In 1919 Adkins was appointed chairman of a committee set up to look at the operation of the statutory scheme of Old Age Pensions.[21] The proceedings of the committee were open and public, ensuring the evidence of the witnesses concerning the poor social and economic circumstances of pensioners was placed squarely in the public domain. As a result of the committee's recommendations the pension increased to 10 shillings a week and various conditions of qualifications were relaxed in favour of applicants, including the raising of income limits, with the effect that around 220,000 additional pensioners came onto the books.[22]

Federal Devolution edit

Also in 1919 Adkins was a member of the Commission on Federal Devolution which looked at the implications of Irish Home Rule.[23] Adkins seemed to be especially interested in this issue of devolution and led or was a member of different deputations to the prime minister to promote home rule all round. In 1921 he backed a Parliamentary Bill to devolve certain powers from the Westminster government to subordinate Parliaments in England, Scotland and Wales.[24]

Others edit

In 1924, he was appointed chairman of a committee established to investigate offences against children and also served as a member of the Royal Commission on Local Government

Death edit

Adkins died at his home at Springfield, Northampton of gastric influenza on 30 January 1925, at the age of 62.[25]

Publications edit

  • Author of Our County: Sketches in Pen and Ink of Representative Men of Northamptonshire. London: Elliott Stock. 1893.
  • Introductory chapter in Markham, C.A, ed. (1898). The Records of the Borough of Northampton. Northampton: Corporation of Northampton.
  • Introduction to Culross, James (1897). The Three Rylands: A Hundred Years of Various Christian Service. London: Elliott Stock.
  • Co-editor (with R.M. Serjeantson): A History of the County of Northampton. Victoria County History. Vol. 1. Westminster: Archibald Constable & Co. 1902.
  • Co-editor (with R.M. Serjeantson): A History of the County of Northampton. Victoria County History. Vol. 2. Westminster: Archibald Constable & Co. 1906.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Anon (2007). "Adkins, Sir (William) Ryland Dent". Who's Who & Who Was Who. A & C Black. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U192621. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ The Times, 31 January 1925, p. 14.
  3. ^ The Times House of Commons 1910; Politico’s Publishing 2004, p. 69.
  4. ^ The Times, 28 January 1890.
  5. ^ The Times, 24 November 1892, p. 11.
  6. ^ The Times, 13 July 1917, p. 3.
  7. ^ a b c d British parliamentary election results, 1885-1918 (Craig).
  8. ^ The Times, 2 August 1911, p. 11.
  9. ^ P. F. Clarke, Lancashire and the New Liberalism; Cambridge University Press, 2007, p. 386.
  10. ^ H Montgomery Hyde, Lord Reading: The Life of Rufus Isaacs, First Marquess of Reading; Heinemann, 1967, p. 159.
  11. ^ Trevor Wilson, The Downfall of the Liberal Party; Cornell University Press, 1966, pp. 160-161.
  12. ^ F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results, 1918-1949; Political Reference Publications, Glasgow, 1949, p. 401.
  13. ^ The Times, 15 November 1920, p. 9.
  14. ^ a b F W S Craig, op cit.
  15. ^ The Times, 7 December 1923, p. 12.
  16. ^ The Times, 25 April 1908, p. 11.
  17. ^ The Times, 13 April 1911, p. 10.
  18. ^ The Times, 6 March 1911, p. 6.
  19. ^ The Times, 3 February 1917, p. 5.
  20. ^ The Times, 28 March 1917, p. 7.
  21. ^ The Times, 8 November 1919, p. 9.
  22. ^ John Macnicol, The Politics of Retirement in Britain, 1878-1948; Cambridge University Press, 2002 Chapter 7 – The First World War and the Rylands Adkins Committee, p. 167ff.
  23. ^ The Times, 17 October 1919, p. 13.
  24. ^ The Times, 29 April 1921, p. 7.
  25. ^ The Times, 31 January 1925, p. 14.

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Ryland Adkins

ryland, adkins, william, ryland, dent, adkins, 1862, january, 1925, english, barrister, judge, liberal, politician, contents, family, education, career, politics, northamptonshire, politics, parliament, middleton, election, 1911, marconi, scandal, 1918, genera. Sir William Ryland Dent Adkins 11 May 1862 30 January 1925 was an English barrister judge and Liberal politician Ryland Adkins Contents 1 Family and education 2 Career 3 Politics 3 1 Northamptonshire politics 3 2 Parliament 3 3 Middleton by election 1911 3 4 The Marconi Scandal 3 5 1918 General Election 3 6 Middleton and Prestwich by election 1920 3 7 1922 1924 4 Other public appointments 4 1 Drunkenness law 4 2 Isle of Man constitution 4 3 Electoral Reform 4 4 Pensions 4 5 Federal Devolution 4 6 Others 5 Death 6 Publications 7 References 8 External linksFamily and education editRyland Adkins as he was known at least professionally was the son of William Adkins JP of Springfield Northampton and his wife Harriet nee Dent of the Manor House Milton Northampton 1 He was educated at Mill Hill School University College London where he obtained a BA degree 2 and Balliol College Oxford where he won a History Exhibition 3 He was an ardent Free churchman and was an active member of the Congregational Union Career editAdkins studied for the law and in 1890 was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple 4 He practised on the Midland circuit 5 took silk in 1920 and sat occasionally as a Commissioner of Assize He served as Recorder of Nottingham from 1911 to 1920 From 1920 until his death he sat as Recorder of Birmingham He was knighted in 1911 1 Politics editNorthamptonshire politics edit Adkins was an original member of Northamptonshire County Council at its creation in 1889 He was for many years its Vice Chairman and became Chairman of the County Council in 1920 He was also Vice Chairman of the Northamptonshire Territorial Force Association and played an important role in recruiting during the First World War 6 He later served as Chairman of the Executive Council of the Association of County Councils He was created Deputy Lieutenant of Northamptonshire in 1922 and served for many as a JP for the county and Borough of Northampton 1 Adkins was proud of his Northamptonshire heritage and was the author of a book about the county in 1893 and a contributor to a number of others including the Victoria History of the County Parliament edit Adkins was first elected to Parliament at the 1906 general election as Liberal MP for Middleton Lancashire in a straight fight with the Unionists by a majority of 1 533 votes General election January 1906 Middleton 7 page needed Electorate 14 314 Party Candidate Votes Liberal Ryland Adkins 7 018 56 1 Conservative Cyril CH Potter 5 485 43 9 Majority 1 533 12 2Turnout 87 3Liberal gain from Conservative Swing He held the seat in the January 1910 general election General election January 1910 Middleton 7 Electorate 15 391 Party Candidate Votes Liberal Ryland Adkins 7 669 55 0 1 1Conservative Patrick Rose Innes 6 266 45 0 1 1Majority 1 403 10 0 2 2Turnout 90 5 3 2Liberal hold Swing 1 1Adkins held his seat again in a straight fight against a Liberal Unionist candidate this time with a majority of 1 403 and in December 1910 with a majority of 787 General election December 1910 Middleton 7 Electorate 15 391 Party Candidate Votes Liberal Ryland Adkins 7 071 52 9 2 1Liberal Unionist William Hewins 6 284 47 1 2 1Majority 787 5 8 4 2Turnout 86 8 3 7Liberal hold Swing 2 1Middleton by election 1911 edit In 1911 upon his appointment as Recorder of Nottingham Adkins was obliged by the electoral law of the day to resign his seat and re contest it at a by election held on 2 August 1911 His candidature was opposed by the Conservatives W A S Hewins who was his opponent at the December 1910 general election and who had reduced his majority from 1 403 votes in January 1910 to 787 in December stood against him again 8 The by election was fought mainly on the issue of National Insurance which Hewins took up vigorously if by some accounts rather cynically In the course of the campaign Lloyd George had to send Adkins a letter for public consumption refuting in detail Hewins claims Despite the strong attack however Adkins held on although Hewins reduced his majority again this time to 411 votes 9 1911 Middleton by election 7 Electorate 15 447 Party Candidate Votes Liberal Sir Ryland Adkins 6 863 51 5 1 4Liberal Unionist William Hewins 6 452 48 5 1 4Majority 411 3 0 2 8Turnout 86 2 0 6Liberal hold Swing 1 4The Marconi Scandal edit Adkins played a cameo role in the Marconi scandal which broke in the summer of 1912 It was alleged that highly placed members of H H Asquith s Liberal government notably Lloyd George and Rufus Isaacs had profited by improper use of information about the Government s intentions with respect to the Marconi Company Knowing that the government was about to issue a lucrative contract to the British Marconi company they had bought shares in an American subsidiary In the end Parliament did not wish to see these ministers brought down over their involvement in an affair from which they had not profited unduly and it was their political judgment rather than their honour which was questioned Adkins was chosen by the government Whips to move an amendment to a motion of censure on the issue which accepted the ministers expressions of regret and acquitted them of acting in bad faith and of charges of corruption 10 1918 General Election edit The 1918 general election was known as the coupon election after the letter of endorsement sent to candidates supporting the coalition government of David Lloyd George Adkins had been regarded as supporter of H H Asquith during the war and in the split in the Liberal Party occasioned by Lloyd George s replacement of Asquith as prime minister He opposed the introduction of conscription and he voted with Asquith and against Lloyd George in the Maurice Debate of May 1918 Despite all this he received the Coalition coupon for the 1918 general election and thereafter acted in Parliament as a Lloyd George Liberal 11 Adkins Middleton seat had disappeared in a boundary revision for this election and he had been adopted as Liberal candidate for the new Middleton and Prestwich constituency As a result of receiving the coupon Adkins did not face a Conservative opponent at the general election and held his seat comfortably with a majority of 8 330 over Labour 12 Middleton and Prestwich by election 1920 edit Adkins had to go through the by election process again in 1920 on his appointment as Recorder of Birmingham At this by election however he was returned unopposed as a result of an electoral truce called because of an outbreak of smallpox in Middleton and the recommendation of the medical authorities that door to door canvassing and public meetings should be avoided 13 1922 1924 edit In 1922 Adkins fought Middleton and Prestwich as a National Liberal Although Lloyd George had been ousted as prime minister as a result of the decision of Conservative MPs at the Carlton Club meeting of 19 October 1922 to withdraw from the coalition Adkins did not face Unionist opposition in 1922 In a straight fight with Labour candidate Matthew Burrow Farr he held the seat by a majority of 4 327 votes By the time of the 1923 general election however things had changed A degree of Liberal reunion had taken place with both the Lloyd George and Asquithian wings of the party agreeing to fight the election together in defence of the traditional Liberal policy of Free Trade which the new prime minister Stanley Baldwin had chosen to be the central issue in the campaign The Tories had recovered their organisation in Middleton and they adopted Sir Nairne Stewart Sandeman as their candidate Adkins was also opposed again by Farr for Labour and in a close three cornered fight he just failed to hold his seat by the margin of 529 votes or 1 9 of the poll 14 incomplete short citation page needed Stewart Sandeman s victory was the first recorded Conservative gain of the election 15 Adkins attempted to regain the seat at the 1924 general election But by this time the electorate was increasingly coming to see British politics through its traditional two party lens with the realistic choice for government being between Conservative or Labour parties In a three cornered contest with Stewart Sandeman and Farr Adkins came bottom of the poll with 21 7 of the votes cast 14 incomplete short citation page needed Other public appointments editDuring his political career Adkins served on many different committees and public inquiries as an appointee of the government The following are examples of his more important commissions Drunkenness law edit In 1908 he was appointed by the Home Secretary to sit on a committee to investigate the operation of the law in relation to inebriates drunkenness 16 Isle of Man constitution edit In 1911 he was appointed a member of the Home Office Committee of Inquiry into the constitutional crisis in the Isle of Man 17 which arose out of dispute between the Lieutenant Governor of the Isle of Man the Island s Legislative Council and the British Home Office on the one side and the members of the House of Keys on the other on the question of where responsibility for the passing of money bills should sit with the Keys asserting primacy as the elected representatives of the Manx people 18 Electoral Reform edit Adkins also sat as a member of the Speaker s Conference on Electoral Reform of 1917 1918 which looked amongst other things at the proposals for votes for women which came into effect for the 1918 general election 19 The conference also proposed the ending of plural voting and the introduction of proportional representation in large urban areas 20 but these were among the recommendations not introduced Pensions edit In 1919 Adkins was appointed chairman of a committee set up to look at the operation of the statutory scheme of Old Age Pensions 21 The proceedings of the committee were open and public ensuring the evidence of the witnesses concerning the poor social and economic circumstances of pensioners was placed squarely in the public domain As a result of the committee s recommendations the pension increased to 10 shillings a week and various conditions of qualifications were relaxed in favour of applicants including the raising of income limits with the effect that around 220 000 additional pensioners came onto the books 22 Federal Devolution edit Also in 1919 Adkins was a member of the Commission on Federal Devolution which looked at the implications of Irish Home Rule 23 Adkins seemed to be especially interested in this issue of devolution and led or was a member of different deputations to the prime minister to promote home rule all round In 1921 he backed a Parliamentary Bill to devolve certain powers from the Westminster government to subordinate Parliaments in England Scotland and Wales 24 Others edit In 1924 he was appointed chairman of a committee established to investigate offences against children and also served as a member of the Royal Commission on Local GovernmentDeath editAdkins died at his home at Springfield Northampton of gastric influenza on 30 January 1925 at the age of 62 25 Publications editAuthor of Our County Sketches in Pen and Ink of Representative Men of Northamptonshire London Elliott Stock 1893 Introductory chapter in Markham C A ed 1898 The Records of the Borough of Northampton Northampton Corporation of Northampton Introduction to Culross James 1897 The Three Rylands A Hundred Years of Various Christian Service London Elliott Stock Co editor with R M Serjeantson A History of the County of Northampton Victoria County History Vol 1 Westminster Archibald Constable amp Co 1902 Co editor with R M Serjeantson A History of the County of Northampton Victoria County History Vol 2 Westminster Archibald Constable amp Co 1906 References editConstructs such as ibid loc cit and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia s style guide for footnotes as they are easily broken Please improve this article by replacing them with named references quick guide or an abbreviated title June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b c Anon 2007 Adkins Sir William Ryland Dent Who s Who amp Who Was Who A amp C Black doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 U192621 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Times 31 January 1925 p 14 The Times House of Commons 1910 Politico s Publishing 2004 p 69 The Times 28 January 1890 The Times 24 November 1892 p 11 The Times 13 July 1917 p 3 a b c d British parliamentary election results 1885 1918 Craig The Times 2 August 1911 p 11 P F Clarke Lancashire and the New Liberalism Cambridge University Press 2007 p 386 H Montgomery Hyde Lord Reading The Life of Rufus Isaacs First Marquess of Reading Heinemann 1967 p 159 Trevor Wilson The Downfall of the Liberal Party Cornell University Press 1966 pp 160 161 F W S Craig British Parliamentary Election Results 1918 1949 Political Reference Publications Glasgow 1949 p 401 The Times 15 November 1920 p 9 a b F W S Craig op cit The Times 7 December 1923 p 12 The Times 25 April 1908 p 11 The Times 13 April 1911 p 10 The Times 6 March 1911 p 6 The Times 3 February 1917 p 5 The Times 28 March 1917 p 7 The Times 8 November 1919 p 9 John Macnicol The Politics of Retirement in Britain 1878 1948 Cambridge University Press 2002 Chapter 7 The First World War and the Rylands Adkins Committee p 167ff The Times 17 October 1919 p 13 The Times 29 April 1921 p 7 The Times 31 January 1925 p 14 External links editHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Ryland AdkinsParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byEdward Fielden Member of Parliament for Middleton1906 1918 Constituency abolishedNew constituency Member of Parliament for Middleton amp Prestwich1918 1923 Succeeded byNairne Stewart Sandeman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ryland Adkins amp oldid 1175132220, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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