John Molson (British politician)

Major John Elsdale Molson TD (1863–1925) was a Canadian-born British Conservative politician and member of the Molson family of Montreal that started the Molson brewery.

John Elsdale Molson
Molson in 1922.
Member of Parliament
for Gainsborough
In office
14 December 1918  16 November 1923
Preceded byGeorge Jackson Bentham
Succeeded byRichard Winfrey
Majority2,078 (13.6%)
Personal details
Born6 August 1863
Montreal, Province of Canada
Died28 November 1925 (aged 62)
Goring-by-Sea, Sussex, United Kingdom
Resting placeSt Mary's Church, Goring-by-Sea
Political partyConservative
SpouseMary Leeson
EducationCheltenham College
Alma materEmmanuel College, Cambridge
Military service
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch/serviceBritish Army
UnitRoyal Army Medical Corps
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsTD

John Molson was the son of Samuel Elsdale and Agnes Molson, born in Montreal on 6 August 1863. Educated at Cheltenham College and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, he qualified from the Middlesex Hospital Medical School in 1889.[1] The Medical Register for 1891 listed him as employed at the Middlesex Hospital in London having registered as a doctor on 19 September 1889.

He held a commission in the Royal Army Medical Corps (Territorials) from 1900 and served at home and in Egypt in World War I.

He practised for some years at Chelmsford. From 1906 he rented Goring Hall, Goring-by-Sea near Worthing, in Sussex and lived the life of a country gentleman. He died on 28 November 1925, aged 62, and his funeral was held at St Mary's Church, Goring on 2 December 1925.

He was the Unionist Member of Parliament for Gainsborough, Lincolnshire from 1918 to 1923, having unsuccessfully contested Bethnal Green North East in the two 1910 general elections. On 22 November 1920 Irish Nationalist MP Joseph Devlin raised the Croke Park deaths the previous day, causing uproar. Devlin continued to try to put his question and was assaulted by Molson who pulled him over the bench.[2] The Speaker suspended the sitting for 15 minutes; when it resumed, Molson apologised and Devlin was able to ask his questions and to get an answer.[3] He lost his seat to the Liberal Sir Richard Winfrey in the 1923 general election.

Family

He married Mary Leeson in 1891 in London. She had been born in Argentina, the daughter of Dr Arthur Edmund Leeson, and christened at St John's Cathedral in Buenos Aires on 16 June 1863.[4]

His son Arthur Hugh Elsdale Molson (1903–1991) was a Conservative politician and was created a Life Peer in 1961 as Baron Molson. His three other sons died in military service: Harold Elsdale Molson died on 5 February 1946 as a major in Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, Eric Elsdale Molson was killed in action on Good Friday, 1 April 1915 as a lieutenant in the Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment), and Gerald Hildred Elsdale Molson was killed serving as second in command of HMS Rawalpindi when she was sunk by the German warships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau on 23 November 1939.[5]

References

  1. Alumni Cantabrigienses Part II 1752–1900. Vol. iv (1947)
  2. "Parliament", The Times, 23 November 1920, p. 17.
  3. Hansard HC 5ser vol 135 cols 38-9.
  4. Michael Stenton and Stephen Lees, Who’s Who of British Members of Parliament, Vol. III, 1919–1945; A Biographical Dictionary of the House of Commons, Harvester Press, Hassocks, Sussex, 1979, p. 247
  5. Chelmsford War Memorial entry
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