Guy Lloyd
Sir Ernest Guy Richard Lloyd, 1st Baronet, DSO (7 August 1890 – 22 September 1987) was an English-descent Scottish Unionist Party politician. The son of a Shropshire family, a paternal uncle, George Butler Lloyd had been Member of Parliament for Shrewsbury.[1]
Lloyd was born in 1890, son of Major Ernest Thomas Lloyd (1860-1935), formerly of the Bengal Civil Service, and his wife Ethel Mary (died 1961), second daughter of Sir Richard Dansey Green-Price, 2nd Baronet.[1] He was educated at Rossall School and the United Services College.[2] He attended university at Keble College, Oxford, where he graduated BA in 1913, and MA in 1919 after his interval for military service.[1]
At the start of World War I, he entered the King's Shropshire Light Infantry and served with them through the war, being mentioned in despatches and awarded the DSO in 1917. At the rank of Captain he transferred to the Territorial Army Reserve of Officers in 1919. He was promoted Major in 1929[3] and became second in command of the 5th Battalion of The Loyal Regiment in 1930. He was re-employed at the start of World War II in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment.[1]
Between the wars he had a career in the textile industry, becoming director of cotton spinners James Chadwick and Brothers in Bolton, Lancashire, where he moved home, in 1921, leaving the firm when he moved to Scotland in 1931. He was subsequently administrator of J and P Coats Ltd of Glasgow and Paisley, until he retired in 1938,[4] and director of its subsidiary companies.[1]
Lloyd, who had served as a Town Councillor in Bolton from 1923 to 1931,[1] became Member of Parliament (MP) for East Renfrewshire at a by-election in May 1940, and held the seat until he stood down at the 1959 general election. He was also a DL for Dunbartonshire, a county in which he made his home, in 1953.[1]
He was knighted in 1953 and made a baronet on 23 July 1960, of Rhu in the county of Dunbartonshire.[5]
He married in 1918 Helen Kynaston, daughter of Colonel E.W. Greig of Northcliffe Hall, Styal, Cheshire, and by her had one son and four daughters.[1] She predeceased him in 1984.[4] He died in September 1987, aged 97, when his son succeeded to his baronetcy.
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References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 1963. Burke's Peerage Ltd. pp. 1493–1494.His earliest ascertainable Lloyd ancestor lived in Alberbury, Shropshire, in 1583; a son of the latter founded a dynasty based in Shrewsbury.
- ^ [1] List of DSO recipients from Haileybury and its constituent colleges.
- ^ Kelly's Handbook of the Titled, Landed and Official Classes, 1948. Kelly's. p. 1259.
- ^ a b Who's Who, 1986. A and C Black. p. 1059. ISBN 0-7136-2760-3.
- ^ London Gazette Issue 42051 published on the 3 June 1960. Page 1 of 36
- ^ Debrett's Peerage. 2000.
- Craig, F. W. S. (1983) [1969]. British parliamentary election results 1918-1949 (3rd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. ISBN 0-900178-06-X.
- Historical list of MPs: R (part 1)
- Leigh Rayment's list of baronets
External links
- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Sir Guy Lloyd
- Portraits of Sir (Ernest) Guy Richard Lloyd, 1st Bt at the National Portrait Gallery, London
- 1890 births
- 1987 deaths
- Unionist Party (Scotland) MPs
- Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
- King's Shropshire Light Infantry officers
- Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Scottish constituencies
- UK MPs 1935–1945
- UK MPs 1945–1950
- UK MPs 1950–1951
- UK MPs 1951–1955
- UK MPs 1955–1959
- Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
- Loyal Regiment officers
- Royal Warwickshire Fusiliers officers
- British Army personnel of World War I
- British Army personnel of World War II