- Source: George Davy Kelley
George Davy Kelley (1848 – 18 December 1911) was a British trades unionist and Labour politician.
Kelley was born in Ruskington, Lincolnshire in 1848. He became apprenticed to the lithographic printing trade in York. Following his apprenticeship, he worked as a printer in London, Birmingham, Leeds and Bradford. He moved to Manchester to become general secretary of the Amalgamated Society of Lithographic Printers, formed in 1880.
Kelley was an early proponent of the Labour movement putting forward candidates for election. He became vice-president of the Labour Electoral Association in 1889, and presided at the Labour Electoral Congress held in Hanley in 1890. He was elected to the parliamentary committee of the Trades Union Congress in 1892.
He held the office of secretary of a number of bodies: the Manchester Trades and Labour Council, the Lancashire and Cheshire Federation of Trade Councils, the Manchester and District Board of Conciliation and the National Printing and Kindred Trades Federation.
In 1902 he travelled to New York City as part of Alfred Moseley's Commission of Inquiry into the organisation of Labour. Two years later as vice-chairman of the National Committee of Organised Labour, he campaigned for the introduction of a universal old age pension.
At the 1906 general election he was selected as one of the Labour Representation Committee candidates, and was elected as Member of Parliament for Manchester South West, unseating the sitting Conservative MP. Due to ill-health he retired from parliament at the next general election in January 1910. He died in Manchester in December 1911, aged 63.
References
Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by George Davy Kelley
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- George Davy Kelley
- George Kelley
- Amalgamated Society of Lithographic Printers
- List of minor party and independent MPs elected in the United Kingdom
- Ruskington
- List of Labour Party (UK) MPs
- Manchester Trades Union Council
- Tom Fox (British politician)
- Printing and Kindred Trades Federation
- John Wilson (Mid Durham MP)