Alexander Spearman

Sir Alexander Cadwallader Mainwaring Spearman (2 March 1901 – 5 April 1982) was a British Conservative Member of Parliament (MP).

His father, who was a Commander in the Royal Navy and commanded a battalion of a Royal Naval Brigade in the First World War, was killed in action in the Dardanelles Campaign.

Alexander was educated at Repton and Hertford College, Oxford, where he was in receipt of a scholarship for descendants of Sir Francis Baring. After Oxford, he became a stockbroker, and in 1941 he was elected to Parliament as a Conservative in a by-election for the seat of Scarborough and Whitby. He had earlier failed to be elected at Gorton and Mansfield. He held his seat in every election until 1966 when he retired.

In 1951 to 1952 he was Parliamentary Private Secretary to the President of the Board of Trade. In 1956 he was knighted. A former governor of the London School of Economics, he spoke frequently in the House of Commons on financial and economic issues.

He was married twice and had five children. He married Diana, his first wife, in 1928; they were divorced in 1951, in which year he married his second wife, also called Diana.[1] His first wife contested Poplar South in the 1935 general election, failing to be elected in what was a safe Labour seat.[2] She contested Kingston upon Hull Central in the 1945 general election, again failing to be elected.[3][4]

His grandson Alexander James Spearman (born 1984) married in 2014 Dona Amelia de Orléans e Bragança, daughter of Dom Antônio de Orléans e Bragança, a descendant of the former Brazilian imperial family, and his wife Princess Christine de Ligne, a member of the Belgian aristocracy.

See also

References

  • The Times, Obituary, 6 April 1982
  1. 'SPEARMAN, Sir Alexander Cadwallader Mainwaring', Who Was Who, A & C Black, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 30 Dec 2013
  2. "Two By-Elections: Early Writs For The Wrekin And Scarborough". The Times. 9 September 1941.
  3. "Change Of Plan In Hull Polling Deferred, Shadow Cast By Death Of Candidate". The Times. 3 July 1945.
  4. "Hull Central Held By Labour Final State Of Parties". The Times. 10 August 1945.


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