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Megan Lloyd George

Lady Megan Arvon Lloyd George, CH (22 April 1902 – 14 May 1966) was a Welsh politician and the first female Member of Parliament (MP) for a Welsh constituency. She also served as Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party, before later becoming a Labour MP, serving in Parliament for 30 years. In 2016, she was named as one of "the 50 greatest Welsh men and women of all time".[1]

This British surname is barrelled, being made up of multiple names. It should be written as Lloyd George, not George.

Lady Megan Lloyd George

Percy Harris (1945)

Donald Wade (1962)

Megan Arvon George

(1902-04-22)22 April 1902
Criccieth, Caernarfonshire (present-day Gwynedd), Wales

14 May 1966(1966-05-14) (aged 64)
Pwllheli, Wales

Philip Noel-Baker (1936–1956)

Liberal Party[edit]

Like her brother, Gwilym, she followed her father into politics. She became the first female MP in Wales when she won Anglesey for the Liberals in 1929.


Along with her father, she refused to support Ramsay MacDonald's National Government in 1931 and successfully held Anglesey as an opposition Liberal at the 1931 General Election. She held the seat again as a Liberal from 1935 to 1951. During World War II, she was a member of Radical Action, which called for a more radical political stance and for the party to withdraw from the war-time electoral truce.


Throughout the 1940s and 1950s she campaigned for a Welsh Parliament and the creation of a Secretary of State for Wales. Prominent among the radicals in the Liberal Party, she opposed what she saw as the party's drift away from her father's brand of liberalism. During the late 1940s, Lady Megan (as she was universally known) remained on friendly terms with Clement Attlee and there were rumours that she would join the Labour Party.[6] In 1949, Lady Megan was elected Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party in a bid to create unity, but after losing her seat she stood down in 1952. Disillusioned with the Liberals, she indicated in November that year that she would not stand again in Anglesey.[7]

Awards and legacy[edit]

She was posthumously appointed as a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in the Dissolution Honours List published five days after her death.[9]


In 2016 she was included in a list of "the 50 greatest Welsh men and women of all time".[1]


In 2019 a Purple Plaque to commemorate her was installed on the building that had been her family home in Cricieth.[10]

Jones, J. Graham (June 1993). (PDF). Welsh History Review. 16 (3): 326–55.

"The Liberal Party and Wales, 1945–79"

Jones, J. Graham, entry in Dictionary of Liberal Biography Brack et al. (eds.) Politico's Publishing, 1998

Jones, J. Graham,

'A breach in the family: the defection from the Liberal Party of Megan and Gwilym Lloyd George'

Jones, Mervyn. A Radical Life: The Biography of Megan Lloyd George, 1902–66. London: Hutchinson, 1991.  0-09-174829-1

ISBN

Price, Emyr Megan Lloyd George; Gwynedd Archives Service, 1983

. UK National Archives.

"Archival material relating to Megan Lloyd George"

David Lloyd George Exhibition, National Library of Wales