- Source: Henry Betterton, 1st Baron Rushcliffe
Henry Bucknall Betterton, 1st Baron Rushcliffe, GBE, PC (15 August 1872 – 18 November 1949), known as Sir Henry Betterton, Bt, between 1929 and 1935, was a British barrister and Conservative politician. He served as Minister of Labour under Ramsay MacDonald between 1931 and 1934.
Background and education
Betterton was the son of Henry Inman Betterton, of Woodville, Leicestershire, and Agnes, daughter of Samuel Bucknall. He was educated at Rugby and Christ Church, Oxford, and was called to the Bar, Inner Temple, in 1896. He practiced for some years at the Chancery Bar.
Political career
Betterton was elected Member of Parliament for Rushcliffe in Nottingham in 1918. He served under Stanley Baldwin as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Labour between 1923 and 1924 and again between 1924 and 1929. When the National Government was formed in 1931 he was sworn of the Privy Council and made Minister of Labour under Ramsay MacDonald, a post he held until 1934, when he left the House of Commons after appointment as the chair of the Unemployment Assistance Board.
Betterton was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1918 and a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1920. He was made a Baronet, of Blackfordby in the County of Leicester, in 1929 and raised to the peerage as Baron Rushcliffe, of Blackfordby in the County of Leicester, in 1935. In 1941 he was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire.
Nurses Salaries Committee
Rushcliffe, as he was now known, chaired the Nurses Salaries Committee which was established in October 1941. It was the first official body to fix salary scales and conditions for nursing in England.
The Committee consisted of two panels, each of twenty members, one panel representing employers, the other employees.
The employers panel consisted of the British Hospitals Association (in association with King Edward's Hospital Fund for London and the Nuffield Trust) 6 seats; County Councils Association 4 seats; Association of Municipal Corporations 4 seats; London County Council 4 seats; Urban District Councils Association 1 seat; Rural District Councils Association 1 seat; Queen's Institute of District Nursing 1 seat.
The employees panel consisted of the Royal College of Nursing 9 seats; Trades Union Congress 5 seats; National Association of Local Government Officers (NALGO) 3 seats; Royal British Nurses' Association 1 seat; British College of Nurses 1 seat; Association of Hospital Matrons 1. A parallel committee was set up in Scotland, alongside the creation of a Nursing Division in the Ministry of Health, UK in 1941.
Family
Lord Rushcliffe was twice married. He married firstly Violet, daughter of J. G. Gilliat, in 1912. They had two daughters. After her death in October 1947 he married secondly Inez Alfreda, daughter of Alfred Lubbock and widow of Sir Harold Edward Snagge, in 1948. Rushcliffe died in November 1949, aged 77, when the baronetcy and barony became extinct. His second wife died in May 1955.
Arms
See also
Report of the Commission on the Palestine Disturbances of August, 1929, Cmd. 3530
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Henry Betterton
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Henry Betterton, 1st Baron Rushcliffe
- Betterton
- Nursing in the United Kingdom
- Ralph Assheton, 1st Baron Clitheroe
- Leif Jones
- List of Conservative Party MPs (UK)
- List of Old Rugbeians
- List of MPs elected in the 1924 United Kingdom general election
- List of MPs elected in the 1929 United Kingdom general election
- List of MPs elected in the 1931 United Kingdom general election