Arthur Stanley (politician)


Sir Arthur Stanley was a British Conservative politician

Biography

He was born on 18 November 1869 as the third son of Frederick Stanley, Lord Stanley. He travelled to Canada with his father on the latter's appointment as Governor General of Canada in 1888, becoming an ice hockey player and a member of the Rideau Hall Rebels.
The family returned to England in 1893 and Stanley was elected as Member of Parliament for Ormskirk in 1898, a position he held until 1918. He was Provincial Grand Master of the Isle of Man Freemasons from 1902 to 1912 and had a Lodge named in his honour, he was also Chairman of the Royal Automobile Club from 1905–1936 and Treasurer of St Thomas' Hospital from 1917–1943. He had been knighted for his services in 1917.
Chairman of the Joint War Committee of the Joint War Organisation, from 1939. He was permanently disabled and though he was frequently in pain, after contracting rheumatic fever in the 1880s, it did not hamper his activities through either of the world wars.
He died, unmarried, on 4 November 1947.