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Frederick Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton

Frederick James Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton, CH, PC (23 August 1883 – 14 December 1964), was an English businessman and politician who served as chairman of the Conservative Party from 1946 to 1955.

The Earl of Woolton

Office abolished

Office established

Office abolished

Frederick James Marquis

(1883-08-23)23 August 1883
Ordsall, Salford, Lancashire, England

14 December 1964(1964-12-14) (aged 81)
Arundel, Sussex, England

Maud Smith
(m. 1912; died 1961)

Margaret Thomas
(m. 1962)

2

Businessman, politician

In April 1940, he was appointed Minister of Food and established the rationing system. During this time, he maintained food imports from America and organised a programme of free school meals. The vegetarian Woolton pie was named after Woolton, as one of the recipes commended to the British public due to a shortage of meat, fish, and dairy products during the Second World War. In 1943, Woolton was appointed Minister of Reconstruction, planning for post-war Britain.

Early career[edit]

Lord Woolton was born at 163 West Park Street in Ordsall, Salford, Lancashire, in 1883. He was the only surviving child of a saddler, Thomas Robert Marquis (1857–1944), and his wife, Margaret Marquis, née Ormerod (1854–1923). Educated in Ardwick and then at Manchester Grammar School and the University of Manchester, Woolton was an active member of the Unitarian Church. He was active in social work in Liverpool (1906–1918).[1]


Woolton hoped to pursue an academic career in the social sciences, but his wish was frustrated by his family's financial circumstances, and he became a mathematics teacher at Burnley Grammar School. He was forced to turn down a research fellowship in Sociology at the University of London but was appointed a research fellow in Economics at the University of Manchester in 1910, where he took the degree of MA in 1912.[1]


Having been judged unfit for military service, Woolton became a civil servant, first in the War Office, then at the Leather Control Board, where he served as a civilian boot controller. At the end of the war, he became secretary of the Boot Manufacturers' Federation, joining Lewis's department store in Liverpool, where he was an executive (1928–1951), becoming director in 1928 and chairman in 1936.[1] In 1938, he responded to the Anschluss by announcing that his stores would boycott Nazi German goods. Despite public support, he was reprimanded by Horace Wilson on behalf of Neville Chamberlain's National Government for diverging from its European policy of appeasement.[2]


Woolton was knighted in 1935 and was raised to the peerage in 1939 for his contribution to British industry. Despite his wishes, he was informed that it was not possible to be Baron Marquis (because "Marquess", or "Marquis", is another grade of the peerage of the United Kingdom), so he took the title Baron Woolton after the Liverpool suburb of Woolton in which he had lived. He subsequently served on several government committees (including the Cadman committee). He refused to affiliate himself with any political party.[1]

President of the Royal Statistical Society[edit]

In November 1945, Woolton gave his inaugural address as President of the Royal Statistical Society.[12]

Death[edit]

Woolton died 14 December 1964 at his home, Walberton House, in Arundel, Sussex. His titles passed to his son, Roger. He is buried at St Mary's Church, Walberton, Sussex.[18]

(1975). The Impact of Hitler: British Politics & Policy 1933–1940. Cambridge University Press. p. 419. ISBN 0-521-20582-4.

Cowling, Maurice

Kandiah, Michael D. (May 2008). . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34885. Retrieved 8 August 2009. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

"Marquis, Frederick James, first earl of Woolton (1883–1964)"

Sitwell, William (2016). Eggs or Anarchy? The Remarkable Story of the Man Tasked with the Impossible: To Feed a Nation at War. London: Simon & Schuster.  978-1-4711-5105-7.

ISBN

Michael Kandiah & Judith Rowbotham (Editors), The Diaries and Letters of Lord Woolton 1940–1945. Records of Social and Economic History Series, vol. 61. Oxford: University Press for the British Academy, 2020. Hardcover. xxvii+324 p. ISBN 978-0-19-726684-7.

Catalogue of the papers of Frederick Marquis, Lord Woolton, at the Bodleian Library, Oxford

in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Newspaper clippings about Frederick Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton