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Joseph Godber

Joseph Bradshaw Godber, Baron Godber of Willington, PC (17 March 1914 – 25 August 1980) was a British Conservative Party politician. He was the Member of Parliament for Grantham from 1951 to 1979 and held ministerial posts in the governments of Harold Macmillan, Alec Douglas-Home, and Edward Heath.

The Lord Godber of Willington

(1914-03-17)17 March 1914
Bedford, England

25 August 1980(1980-08-25) (aged 66)
Bedford, England

Miriam Sanders
(m. 1936)

2

Background[edit]

Godber was born in Bedford.[1] He was educated at Bedford School, between 1922 and 1931, and became a nurseryman. He became chairman of the county glasshouse section of the National Farmers Union and of the publicity and parliamentary committee. He was a member of the Tomato and Cucumber Marketing Board.

Political career[edit]

Godber was a Bedfordshire County Councillor from 1946 until 1952.[2] He was elected Member of Parliament for Grantham in 1951, a seat he held until 1979. He served under Harold Macmillan as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food from 1957 to 1960, as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs from 1960 to 1961, as Minister of State for Foreign Affairs from 1961 to 1963 and as Secretary of State for War in 1963, under Sir Alec Douglas-Home as Minister of Labour from 1963 to 1964 and under Edward Heath as Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 1970 to 1972 and as Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food from 1972 to 1974. Godber was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1963 and in 1979 he was made a life peer as Baron Godber of Willington, of Willington in the County of Bedfordshire.[3]

adviser to the British Government on agricultural matters, President of the East of England Agricultural Society, Chairman of the Bedfordshire Agricultural Executive Committee and the Farmers' Club;[5][6]

W. T. Godber

Chief Medical Officer of the United Kingdom;[5]

Sir George Godber GCB

historian of Bedfordshire and author;[7]

Joyce Godber

Rowland John Godber, owner of a rubber plantation in Malaya and later a prisoner of war. The diary of his experiences as a prisoner of war are extant and held by the ;[8] and

Imperial War Museum

Geoffrey Chapman Godber, DL, Chief executive of West Sussex County Council.[9]

CBE

In 1936, Godber married Miriam Sanders in Bedford. They had two sons (including one born in 1938 and the other in 1944). Godber died in Bedford in 1980.[4]


A number of Godber's siblings distinguished themselves in later life:

1979

Times Guide to the House of Commons

at the National Portrait Gallery, London

Portraits of Joseph Godber