Jump to content

John Stonehouse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by TrangaBellam (talk | contribs) at 12:25, 28 November 2022 (How does this *paragraph* belong to the lead? At best, a line). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

John Stonehouse
Stonehouse in 1967
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
In office
1 October 1969 – 19 June 1970
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byHimself (Postmaster General)
Succeeded byChristopher Chataway
Postmaster General
In office
1 July 1968 – 1 October 1969
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byRoy Mason
Succeeded by
  • Position abolished
  • Himself (Minister, Posts and Telecommunications)

  • The 2nd Viscount Hall (Chairman, Post Office)
Member of Parliament
for Walsall North
In office
28 February 1974 – 27 August 1976
Preceded byWilliam Wells
Succeeded byRobin Hodgson
Member of Parliament
for Wednesbury
In office
28 February 1957 – 8 February 1974
Preceded byStanley Evans
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born
John Thomson Stonehouse

(1925-07-28)28 July 1925[1]
Southampton, Hampshire, England
Died14 April 1988(1988-04-14) (aged 62)
Totton, Hampshire, England
Political partyLabour Co-operative (before 1981)
Other political
affiliations
Spouses
  • Barbara Smith
    (m. 1948; div. 1978)
  • Sheila Buckley
    (m. 1981)
Children4
Alma materLondon School of Economics

John Thomson Stonehouse (28 July 1925 – 14 April 1988) was a British Labour and Co-operative Party politician and cabinet minister under Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Stonehouse is remembered for his unsuccessful attempt at faking his own death in 1974.

Education and early career

Stonehouse was born in Southampton, had a trade unionist upbringing and joined the Labour Party at the age of sixteen. His mother, Rosina Stonehouse,[2] a former scullery maid, was the sixth female mayor of Southampton[3] and a councillor on Southampton City Council from 1936 to 1970.[1]

Stonehouse was educated at Tauntons School (now Taunton's College), Southampton, and the London School of Economics (LSE), where he read for a BSc(Econ.) degree after the war.[1] During his time at the LSE he was chairman of both the chess club[4] and the Labour society.[5] The political scientist Bernard Crick, who was a student contemporary of Stonehouse, recalls that his then nickname was 'Lord John' and that "his conversation was openly and restlessly about how best to get a parliamentary seat."[4]

An economist, he became involved in co-operative enterprise and was a manager of African co-operative societies in Uganda (1952–54).[citation needed] He served as a director (1956–62) and President (1962–64) of the London Co-operative Society.[citation needed]

Political career

Stonehouse stood unsuccessfully in Norwood at the 1949 London County Council election. He was first elected as Labour Co-operative Member of Parliament (MP) for Wednesbury in Staffordshire in a 1957 by-election, having contested Twickenham in 1950 and Burton in 1951.

In February 1959, Stonehouse travelled to the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland on a fact-finding tour in which he condemned the White minority government of Southern Rhodesia. Speaking to the Southern Rhodesia African National Congress, he encouraged Blacks to stand up for their rights and said they had the support of the British Labour Party. He was promptly deported from Southern Rhodesia and banned from returning a year later.[6]

Stonehouse allegedly began spying for Czechoslovakia in 1962. He served as a junior minister of aviation, where he was involved in BOAC's order of Boeing 707 aircraft from the United States, against his own recommendation that they should buy a British aircraft, the Super Vickers VC10. This led to his making accusations against colleagues about the reasons for the decision. In March 1968, he negotiated an agreement providing a framework for the long-term development of technological co-operation between Britain and Czechoslovakia. It provided for the exchange of specialists and information, facilities for study and research in technology, and such other forms of industrial co-operation which might be agreed.[7]

While in the Colonial Office, Stonehouse's rise continued, and in 1967 he became Minister of State for Technology under Tony Benn and later Postmaster General until the position was abolished by the Post Office Act 1969. As Postmaster General, Stonehouse oversaw the introduction of first and second-class stamps.

As Minister of Posts and Telecommunications in 1970, he oversaw the controversial jamming of the offshore radio station Radio North Sea International. When Labour was defeated at the 1970 general election, he was not appointed to the Shadow Cabinet.

When the Wednesbury constituency was abolished in 1974, he stood for and was elected to the nearby Walsall North constituency.

In 1969, Stonehouse was subjected to the assertion that he was a Czechoslovak secret service agent. He successfully defended himself,[8] but the allegation was substantiated in the official history of MI5, The Defence of the Realm (2009) by Cambridge historian Christopher Andrew.[9] In December 2010, it was revealed that, in 1980, then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had agreed to cover up revelations that Stonehouse had been a Czechoslovak spy since the 1960s as there was insufficient evidence to bring him to trial.[10] Until Ray Mawby, briefly a member of a Conservative government, was exposed in June 2012,[11] Stonehouse was the only Minister known to have been an agent for the former Eastern bloc.

Business interests

After 1970, Stonehouse set up various companies in an attempt to secure a regular income. By 1974, most of these were in financial trouble, and he had resorted to deceptive creative accounting. Aware that the Department of Trade and Industry was looking at his affairs, he decided that his best choice would be to flee. Secret British government documents, declassified in 2005, indicate that Stonehouse spent months rehearsing his new identity, that of Joseph Markham—the deceased husband of a constituent.[12]

Faking own death

Stonehouse maintained the pretence of normality until he faked his death on 20 November 1974, leaving a pile of clothes on a beach in Miami Beach to make it appear that he had gone swimming and had drowned, or possibly had been killed by a shark.[12] He was presumed dead, and obituaries were published despite the fact that no corpse had been found. In reality, he was en route to Australia, hoping to set up a new life with his mistress and secretary, Sheila Buckley.[12]

Using false identities, Stonehouse set about transferring large sums of money between banks as a further means of covering his tracks. Under the name of Clive Mildoon, he deposited A$21,500 in cash at the Bank of New Zealand. The teller who handled the money later spotted "Mildoon" at the Bank of New South Wales. Inquiries led the teller to learn that the money was in the name of Joe Markham and he informed the local police. Stonehouse spent a while in Copenhagen with Sheila Buckley, but later returned to Australia, unaware that he was now under surveillance. The police initially suspected him of being Lord Lucan, who had disappeared a fortnight before Stonehouse, following the murder of his children's nanny, Sandra Rivett. Investigators noted that the suspect was reading British newspapers that also included stories attacking the "recently deceased" John Stonehouse. They contacted Scotland Yard, requesting pictures of both Lord Lucan and Stonehouse. On his arrest, the police instructed him to pull down his trousers so they could be sure whether or not he was Lord Lucan, who had a six-inch scar on the inside of his right thigh.[13]

Arrest and aftermath

At a party for After Dark in 1987

Stonehouse was arrested in Melbourne on 24 December 1974.[14] He applied for the position of Steward and Bailiff of the Chiltern Hundreds while still in Australia (one of the ways for an MP to resign), but decided not to sign the papers. Six months after he was arrested, he was deported to the UK; he had tried to obtain offers of asylum from Sweden or Mauritius. He was remanded in Brixton Prison until August 1975 when he was released on bail. He continued to serve as an MP. Although unhappy with the situation, the Labour Party did not expel him. Their Parliamentary majority was very narrow.

Stonehouse conducted his own defence on 21 charges of fraud, theft, forgery, conspiracy to defraud, causing a false police investigation and wasting police time. His trial lasted 68 days. On 6 August 1976, he was convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison for fraud.[12]

On 4 April 1976 Stonehouse had attended a St George's Day festival hosted by the English National Party and confirmed he had joined the party, making Labour a minority government. He agreed to resign as a Privy Counsellor on 17 August 1976,[15] becoming one of only three people to resign from the Imperial Privy Council in the 20th century. Stonehouse tendered his resignation from the House of Commons on 27 August 1976.[16] The subsequent by-election was won by Robin Hodgson, a Conservative. In October 1976, Stonehouse was declared bankrupt.

Stonehouse was imprisoned in HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs. On 30 June 1977, the House of Lords refused his appeal against five of the charges of which he was convicted. While he was in prison, he complained that the prison workshop where he worked played pop music on the radio station. When his health deteriorated, he was moved to HM Prison Blundeston in Suffolk.

Health problems

On 14 August 1979, he was released early from prison because of good behaviour and because he had suffered three heart attacks; he had the first on 18 April 1977, a second one four days later, and a massive heart attack on 13 August 1978. On 6 September 1978 Stonehouse suffered a coronary ischemia attack which required him to spend three days in hospital. He underwent open heart surgery on 7 November 1978 which lasted for six hours.[17]

After release

From January 1980, Stonehouse was a volunteer fundraiser for the East London-based charity, Community Links. He joined the SDP, which later amalgamated with the Liberal Party to become the Liberal Democrats. In June 1980, he was discharged from bankruptcy. Stonehouse wrote three novels, and made TV appearances and radio broadcasts during the rest of his life, mostly in connection with discussing his disappearance. In June 1986 he appeared on TVS's Regrets programme[18] and in December that year on the BBC Radio 4 interview programme In The Psychiatrist's Chair with Anthony Clare.

Personal life

Stonehouse married Barbara Joan Smith in 1948, and they had two daughters, Jane and Julia, and a son, Mathew. After their divorce in 1978, Stonehouse married his mistress, Sheila Elizabeth Buckley, in Hampshire on 31 January 1981. In December 1982 their son James William John was born.

Stonehouse's daughter Julia Stonehouse published an account of her father's life in 2021 entitled John Stonehouse, My Father: The True Story of the Runaway MP; it was released almost simultaneously with a book called Stonehouse: Cabinet Minister, Fraudster, Spy, by criminal defence solicitor Julian Hayes, who is Stonehouse's great nephew through the author's father, Michael Hayes, who was the MP's nephew and his lawyer.[19]

Death

On 25 March 1988, Stonehouse abruptly collapsed on set during an edition of Central Weekend in Birmingham during the filming of a programme about missing people. He was given emergency medical treatment at the studio and an ambulance was called. He was diagnosed as having suffered a minor heart attack and kept in the city's general hospital overnight.[20][page needed] Just under three weeks later, early on 14 April, he suffered a massive heart attack at his house at Dales Way in Totton, Hampshire, where he had moved six months earlier, having lived in London since his release from prison, his last address there having been at 20 Shirland Mews.[21] This time Stonehouse could not be saved, and he died in hospital at 2.30am. He was cremated in Bassett Green, Southampton, on 22 April 1988.[22] The former MP Bruce Douglas-Mann paid tribute. In 1989, his fourth novel was published posthumously. He left under £70,000 according to his will published on 17 August 1988.[23]

Bibliography

  • Prohibited Immigrant, The Bodley Head, 1960, ISBN 978-1-135-35474-9 – Stonehouse's account of his 1959 African tour, which culminated in his deportation from Southern Rhodesia.
  • Death of an Idealist, WH Allen, & Virgin Books, 25 November 1975, ISBN 0-491-01615-8.
  • My Trial, Star, June 1976, ISBN 978-0-352-39749-2.
  • Ralph, Jonathan Cape, 1982, ISBN 0-224-02019-6.
  • The Baring Fault, Calder Publications, 15 May 1986, ISBN 0-7145-4106-0.
  • Oil on the Rift, Robert Hale, 13 August 1987, ISBN 978-0-7090-3056-0.
  • Who Sold Australia?, UK: Robert Hale, 30 March 1989, ISBN 978-0-7090-3623-4.

References

  1. ^ a b c Nicholls, C. S. and Tom McNally (revised), "Stonehouse, John Thomson (1925–1988)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, September 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2022 (subscription required)
  2. ^ "John Stonehouse prison treatment". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  3. ^ "The Secrets of Stonehouse", Southern Daily Echo, UK, 11 October 2009{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  4. ^ a b Joan Abse (ed.), My LSE (London: Robson Books, 1977), p. 157.
  5. ^ STONEHOUSE. "STONEHOUSE, John Thomson". Who's Who & Who Was Who. Vol. 2022 (online ed.). A & C Black. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Unknown parameter |othernames= ignored (help) (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives Volume XII, (April 1959) p. 16774
  7. ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives, Volume 14, (March, 1968) p. 22619
  8. ^ Meikie, James (5 October 2009). "MI5 suspects: John Stonehouse, Bernard Floud and Will Owen". The Guardian. UK..
  9. ^ Norton-Taylor, Richard (5 October 2009). "MI5 monitored union and CND leaders with ministers' backing, book reveals". The Guardian.
  10. ^ Travis, Alan (30 December 2010). "Margaret Thatcher in cover-up after Czech spy exposed John Stonehouse". The Guardian; Politics. UK..
  11. ^ Gordon Corera "Tory MP Raymond Mawby sold information to Czech spies", BBC News, 28 June 2012
  12. ^ a b c d "MP planned fake death for months", News, UK: BBC; Politics, 29 December 2005.
  13. ^ Wright, Edward 'Ed' (2006), History's greatest scandals: shocking stories of powerful people.
  14. ^ Robertson, Geoffrey (1999). The Justice Game. London: Vintage. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0-09-958191-8.
  15. ^ "Announcement from the Privy Council Office", The London Gazette, p. 11347, 19 August 1976
  16. ^ "Announcement from the Commons Speaker", The London Gazette, p. 11917, 31 August 1976
  17. ^ The Guardian pp. 15–17. November 1978
  18. ^ "Regrets?[25/6/86] (1986)". BFI. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  19. ^ "John Stonehouse: Bizarre tale of the MP who faked his own death". BBC News. 27 July 2021.
  20. ^ Stonehouse 2021.
  21. ^ "Deaths, England and Wales, 1984–2006", Find My Past
  22. ^ Glasgow Herald. 15 April 1988
  23. ^ "Wills archive: Millions of documents available online". BBC News. 27 December 2014. Retrieved 24 March 2021.

Further reading

  • Hayes, Julian (22 July 2021). Stonehouse: Cabinet Minister, Fraudster, Spy. ISBN 978-1-4721-4654-0.
  • Stonehouse, Julia (19 July 2021). John Stonehouse, My Father: The True Story of the Runaway MP. ISBN 978-178578-741-6.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Wednesbury
19571974
Constituency abolished
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Walsall North
19741976
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Postmaster General
1968–1969
Position abolished