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The Right Honourable
The Viscount Stansgate
PC DSO DFC
William Wedgwood Benn cropped
Secretary of State for India

In office
7 June 1929 – 24 August 1931
Monarch George V
Prime Minister Ramsay Macdonald
Preceded by The Viscount Peel
Succeeded by Sir Samuel Hoare, Bt
Secretary of State for Air

In office
3 August 1945 – 4 October 1946
Monarch George VI
Prime Minister Clement Attlee
Preceded by Harold Macmillan
Succeeded by Philip Noel-Baker
Personal details
Born 10 May 1877 (1877-05-10)
Hackney, London
Died 17 November 1960 (1960-11-18)
Westminster, London
Nationality British
Political party Liberal
Labour
Spouse(s) Margaret Holmes
Alma mater University College, London

Air Commodore William Wedgwood Benn, 1st Viscount Stansgate PC, DSO, DFC (10 May 1877 – 17 November 1960) was a British Liberal politician who later joined the Labour Party. He was Secretary of State for India between 1929 and 1931 and Secretary of State for Air between 1945 and 1946. He was the father of Tony Benn.

Background and education[]

Born in Hackney, Benn was the second son of Sir John Benn, 1st Baronet. He was educated at the Lycée Condorcet in Paris and at University College, London.

Political career[]

In 1906 Benn was elected as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for the St George's division of Tower Hamlets in east London, a seat he held until 1918. He served under H. H. Asquith as a Lord of the Treasury (government whip) between 1910 and 1915. In 1918 he was elected for Leith in Scotland, a seat he held until March 1927, when he resigned from the Liberal Party and from Parliament. In 1928 Benn re-entered parliament as Labour member for Aberdeen North. He was Secretary of State for India between 1929 and 1931 in Ramsay MacDonald's second government and was sworn of the Privy Council in 1929.[1] However, he refused to follow MacDonald into the National Government coalition with the Conservatives, and at the 1931 election he lost his seat to John George Burnett.[2] He returned to parliament in 1937 when he was elected for Gorton near Manchester.

In 1942 Benn was raised to the peerage as Viscount Stansgate, of Stansgate in the County of Essex.[3] Two years later he was appointed Vice President of the Allied Control Commission which was charged with reconstructing a democratic government in Italy. In 1945 he became Secretary of State for Air in Clement Attlee's Labour government, a position he held until October 1946. He then sat as a backbench Labour peer until his death fourteen years later.

Military career[]

Benn was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Middlesex Yeomanry in 1915 (later promoted to temporary Captain) and served with the Royal Naval Air Service during the First World War, seeing service at Gallipoli. He was awarded the DSO in 1917[4] and the DFC in 1918. The citation for the latter was: "A gallant observer of exceptional ability. After setting out on a bombing raid, the Scout machines assigned to act as an escort became separated, and it then became necessary for the bombing planes to proceed on their task without support. Captain Benn's machine took the lead, followed by three other bombers, and succeeded in dropping his bombs (direct hits) on an enemy aerodrome. On the return journey the bombing machines were attacked by several enemy scouts, which were eventually driven away. Recently, this officer organised and carried out a special flight by night over the enemy's lines, under most difficult circumstances, with conspicuous success. He has at all times set a splendid example of courage" (21 September 1918).[5] Also in September 1918 (night of 8–9 September) Benn was a pilot of Savoia-Pomilio SP.4 aeroplane, specially equipped for a parachute drop. This was the first military parachute/spy mission. The parachutist was Allesandro Tandura (1893 - 1937), who parachuted behind enemy lines in the vicinity of Piave river.

Although in his early 60s at start of the Second World War, Benn returned to military flying joining the Royal Air Force as a pilot officer. Following his promotion to Air Commodore, he served as Director of Public Relations at the Air Ministry.

Family[]

Lord Stansgate married Margaret, daughter of Daniel Holmes, in 1920. His eldest son Michael Benn was killed in the Second World War in 1944. Stansgate died at Westminster, London, in November 1960, aged 83, and was succeeded in the viscountcy by his second son, Tony Benn, who in 1963 succeeded in getting the law changed to allow him to disclaim the peerage.

References[]

External links[]

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Thomas Dewar
Member of Parliament for St George's
1906 – 1918
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for Leith
1918 – 1927
Succeeded by
Ernest Brown
Preceded by
Frank Herbert Rose
Member of Parliament for Aberdeen North
1928 – 1931
Succeeded by
John George Burnett
Preceded by
Joseph Compton
Member of Parliament for Manchester Gorton
1937 – 1942
Succeeded by
William Oldfield
Political offices
Preceded by
The Viscount Peel
Secretary of State for India
1929 – 1931
Succeeded by
Sir Samuel Hoare, Bt
Preceded by
Harold Macmillan
Secretary of State for Air
1945 – 1946
Succeeded by
Philip Noel-Baker
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Stansgate
1942 – 1960
Succeeded by
Tony Benn
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