Harold Finch
Sir Harold Josiah Finch (2 May 1898 – 16 July 1979), OBE was a Welsh Labour Party politician. He was born in Barry, Glamorgan, the elder son of Josiah Coleman Finch and Emmie Finch (née Keedwell).[1] He married Gladys the daughter of Arthur Hinder in 1922, and had one son and one daughter.[2] He died in Newport.[3]
Early life
[edit]Finch attended Gladstone Road Elementary School in Barry and 'was brought up in a very religious atmosphere'[4] because his father was a Sunday-school teacher at the Wesleyan Chapel in Barry and his mother had a strong evangelical outlook. However, because of his father, he was also brought up in an atmosphere of trade unionism and politics. His father became the Secretary of the Barry branch of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants (ASRS)[5] and later held many local political posts. For example, in 1919 he was appointed the first Labour member to represent Barry on Glamorgan County Council; he was the first secretary of Barry Labour Party; he was elected a member of Barry Borough Council. Also, he became a magistrate.
Finch left school at the age of 14 and in 1912 he followed his father into the Barry Railway Company[6] as a clerk.[7] However, early on he began to take 'an intensive interest' in trade unionism. At the age of 17, he became the secretary of the Barry branch of the Railway Clerk's Association[8] and around then he attended lectures that were held under the auspices of the ASRS.
Trade unionism
[edit]About 1916, Finch felt that he was being discriminated against by his employer because of his trade union activities. Also he wanted to serve in the wider Trade Union Movement. Consequently, he attended an interview for the vacancy of a clerk in the offices in Blackwood, Monmouthshire of the Tredegar Valley Miners' District of the South Wales Miners' Federation (the 'Fed').[9] Finch was successful in his interview. Consequently he moved to Blackwood, where he lodged with Charles Edwards, the Assistant Agent, and his wife.[10] Later Finch moved with them to Risca, outside Newport, where, after his marriage to his fiancé Gladys in 1922, he set up home.
Evening classes were held in the Blackwood offices, which Finch attended and for which he undertook secretarial duties.[11] While he was attending the classes he met Aneurin Bevan, who was then working in Ty Trist Colliery, Tredegar.
In 1933 Finch was appointed the assistant compensation secretary and in 1935 he was appointed compensation secretary for the 'Fed'[12] and became an advisor to the National Union of Mineworkers, the NUM, in London.[13] By 1944 Finch had become a member of the 'Government Pneumoconiosis Advisory Committee' and had published several pamphlets on workmen's compensation, including that which was available as a consequence of the Temporary Increases Act, 1943.[14] In 1944 he had published his 'Guide to Workmen's Compensation Act 1925-43'.[15] Finch later extrapolated the considerable expertise that he had acquired about the epidemiology of what was eventually called 'pneumoconiosis' to the pulmonary disease from which the coal trimmers who loaded coal onto the boats in Cardiff, Penarth and Barry docks suffered.[16] He had first-hand experience of the disease because both his father-in-law and his brother-in-law were coal trimmers who died from it.[17]
Around 1946, the NUM appointed Finch to advise Labour Members of Parliament when the bill about the impending National Insurance Scheme was in the committee stage in the House of Commons.[18]
Politics
[edit]In 1928 Finch was elected as a member of Mynyddislwyn District Council|[19] and in 1931 he was elected as its Chairman.[20] In 1949 a deputation of local miners visited Finch and asked him if he would accept a nomination to be selected for the imminent vacancy for the Member of Parliament for Bedwellty.[21] He was duly elected in the 1950 general election and was Under-secretary of State at the Welsh Office from 1964 to 1966 during the first administration of Harold Wilson.
Finch held the seat until he retired from the House of Commons at the 1970 general election. He was succeeded by Neil Kinnock, who became the leader of the Labour Party.
In 1972 Finch had his memoirs published.[22] Shortly afterwards, at the recommendation of John Morris, the Labour MP for Aberavon,[23] he was knighted in the 1976 Birthday Honours for his services to British politics and the trade union movement. He was the first Freeman of Islwyn Borough Council and the Sir Harold Finch Park in Pontllanfraith was created in his honour.
References
[edit]- ^ Finch, Harold (1972). Memoirs of a Bedwellty MP. Risca, Newport: The Starling Press. p. 8.
- ^ Finch, Harold Josiah (1898-1979), Labour politician
- ^ England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007
- ^ Finch, p.9
- ^ Finch, p. 10
- ^ Dictionary of Welsh Biography, entry for 'Finch, Harold Josiah (1898-1979), Labour politician'.
- ^ Finch, p. 12
- ^ Finch, p. 12
- ^ Finch was interviewed by Alfred Onions, the local Miners' Agent, who later became the Member of Parliament for Caerphilly at the 1918 general election.
- ^ Like Onions, Edwards, who was later knighted, became an MP, for the newly-created Bedwellty constituency.
- ^ Finch, p. 21
- ^ Bloor, Michael (2000). "The South Wales Miners Federation, miners' lung and the instrumental use of expertise, 1900-1950". Social Studies of Science. 30 (1): 125-140.
- ^ Finch, p. 154
- ^ Temporary Increases Act, 1943.
- ^ Finch, Harold (1944). Guide to Workmen's Compensation Act 1925-43. Cardiff: South Wales Miners' Federation.
- ^ Bloor, 2000
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Finch, p. 162
- ^ Finch, p. 91
- ^ Finch, p. 92
- ^ Finch, p.93
- ^ Finch, Harold (1972). Memoirs of a Bedwellty MP. Risca, Newport: Starling Press.
- ^ Morrris, John (2011). Fifty years in politics and the law. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-7083-2418-9. Retrieved 18 September 2024.
Further reading
[edit]- Arnot, Robert Page (2023) [originally 1975]. South Wales Miners: Glowyr de Cymru: A History of the South Wales Miners' Federation (1914-1926). Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-032-55142-5.
- Bloor, Michael (2002). "No longer dying for a living: Collective responses to injury risks in South Wales mining communities 1900-47". Sociology. 36 (1): 89-105.
- Bohata, Kirsti; Jones, Alexandra; Mantin, Mike; Thompson, Steven (2020). Disability in industrial Britain A cultural and literary history of impairment in the coal industry 1880-1948. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978 1 5261 2432 6. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
- Francis, Hywel; Smith, David (1980). The Fed A history of the South Wales miners in the twentieth century. London: Lawrence and Wishart.
- Lyddon, Dave (2014). "Trade unions and the history of health and safety in British mining". Historical Studies in Industrial Relations. 35: 157-179.