Tag: History
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Arthur Charles Humphreys-Owen (1836–1905): A Liberal Landowner in a Changing Wales

In the political and civic history of Montgomeryshire during the late nineteenth century, Arthur Charles Humphreys‑Owen stands as a representative figure of a transitional generation. Born into the professional middle ranks of Victorian society but elevated through inheritance into the ranks of the county gentry, Humphreys-Owen embodied the gradual adaptation of the traditional landowning class…
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Emlyn Hooson (1925–2012)

The Barrister Who Carried Welsh Liberalism Through Its Leanest Years In the long aftermath of Lloyd George, Welsh Liberalism did not collapse in a single dramatic moment. It thinned, election by election, chapel by chapel, until it seemed less a political force than a memory. Emlyn Hooson matters because he refused to accept that quiet…
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Clement Davies (1884-1962)

Montgomeryshire’s Last Liberal Statesman In the political history of rural Wales, certain figures stand not merely as representatives of constituencies but as embodiments of an older political culture. Clement Edward Davies, born 14 February 1884 and died 23 July 1962, belongs unmistakably to that tradition. Lawyer, parliamentarian, wartime critic, and ultimately leader of the British…
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David Gibson-Watt (1918-2002) of Doldowlod Hall

Land, Service, Unionism, and the Passing of a Governing Tradition in Mid-Wales James David Gibson-Watt, later Baron Gibson-Watt, occupies a distinctive position in the political and social history of twentieth-century Wales. He was not merely a Conservative politician associated with Radnorshire, but a representative of a governing culture rooted in landownership, military service, and paternal…
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Owen Owen (1847-1910) of Machynlleth

Retail, Respectability, and the Democratization of the High Street There is a recognisable Montgomeryshire pattern in the nineteenth century. Men formed in small, chapel-centred communities along the Dyfi valley stepped into the expanding commercial world of Britain and quietly reshaped it. Coal and rail have long dominated our understanding of Welsh industrial influence, yet modern…
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The Election That Broke an Inheritance

Why Montgomeryshire 2010 Was So Corrosive for Liberal Wales Since publishing my earlier essay on the decline of Liberalism in Wales, I have been asked how one election result in one rural constituency could prove so corrosive for an entire political movement. (source 1) The answer is that Montgomeryshire in 2010 was never merely a…




