Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Henry Labouchère
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{short description|British politician, writer, publisher and theatre owner}} {{For|his uncle|Henry Labouchere, 1st Baron Taunton}} {{EngvarB|date=August 2014}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}} {{Infobox officeholder | honorific_prefix = | name = Henry Labouchère | honorific_suffix = | image = Henry Labouchère.jpg | alt = Headshot of middle-aged white man with greying beard and moustache | caption = | constituency_MP1 = [[Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency)|Middlesex]] | term_start1 = 15 April 1867 | term_end1 = 21 November 1868 | predecessor1 = [[Robert Culling Hanbury]] | successor1 = [[Lord George Hamilton|George Hamilton]] | constituency_MP2 = [[Northampton (UK Parliament constituency)|Northampton]] | term_start2 = 27 April 1880 | term_end2 = 12 January 1906 | successor2 = [[Herbert Paul]] | party = [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] | birth_date = 9 November 1831 | birth_place = London, England | death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1912|1|15|1831|11|9}} | death_place = [[Florence]] | known_for = [[Labouchere Amendment]] criminalising male homosexual activity | spouse = {{marriage|[[Henrietta Hodson]]|1887}} | education = [[Eton College]] | alma_mater = [[Trinity College, Cambridge]] | occupation = writer, publisher and theatre owner }} '''Henry Du Pré Labouchère''' (9 November 1831 – 15 January 1912) was an English politician, writer, publisher and theatre owner in the [[Victorian era|Victorian]] and [[Edwardian era]]s. He is now most remembered for the [[Labouchere Amendment|Labouchère Amendment]], which for the first time criminalised all male homosexual activity in the United Kingdom. Labouchère, who came from a wealthy [[Huguenots|Huguenot]] banking family, was a junior member of the British diplomatic service before briefly serving in Parliament in 1865–68. He lived with the actress [[Henrietta Hodson]] from 1868, and they married in 1887. He made a name for himself as a journalist and theatre producer, first buying a stake in [[The Daily News (UK)|''The Daily News'']] and in 1876 founding the magazine [[Truth (British periodical)|''Truth'']], which he bankrolled during an extensive series of libel suits. In 1880, he returned to Parliament as the [[Liberal party (UK)|Liberal]] member for Northampton, and became a key figure in the radical [[Irish Home Rule movement|Home Rule]] wing of the party. He was a controversial figure, and opposition from [[Queen Victoria]] as well as from senior Liberals ensured that he was never given a ministerial position. He became increasingly unpopular because of his opposition to the [[Second Boer War]], and resigned from politics in 1906, when he left Britain and retired to Italy. ==Early life== Labouchère was born in London to a family of [[Huguenot]] extraction,{{#tag:ref|The family name is variously given as '''Labouchère''' or '''Labouchere'''; both he and other members of his family used both forms during his lifetime.|group=n}} the eldest of three sons and six daughters<ref name=odnb/> of John Peter Labouchère (d. 1863) and Mary Louisa ''née'' Du Pré (1799–1863). John, who settled at [[Broome Hall]],{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} was a partner in the banking house of [[Thomas Hope (banker, born 1769)|Thomas Hope]], and then in [[Williams Deacon's Bank|Deacon's]]; his uncle, also called [[Henry Labouchere, 1st Baron Taunton|Henry Labouchère]] (d. 1869), entered politics and served in Parliament from 1826 to 1859, when he was made a peer as Baron Taunton. Despite disapproving of Labouchère, his uncle helped the young man's early career and left him a sizeable inheritance when he died leaving no male heir.<ref name=odnb>{{cite odnb|year=2009|origyear=2004| last=Sidebotham| first=Herbert|first2=H. C. G.|last2=Matthew|id=34367|title=Labouchere, Henry Du Pré (1831–1912)}}</ref> His grandfather Pierre (Peter) César Labouchère was also a partner in Hope's, and married a daughter of [[Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet|Sir Francis Baring]]. His mother Mary was from an English [[nabob]] family,<ref>Thorold, p. 16</ref> the daughter of [[James Du Pré]] MP, a nephew of [[James Alexander, 1st Earl of Caledon|Lord Caledon]], and his wife Madeline Maxwell, a niece of the [[Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon|Duchess of Gordon]].{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} Labouchère was educated at [[Eton College|Eton]] and [[Trinity College, Cambridge]],<ref>{{acad|id=LBCR850HD|name=Labouchere, Henry Dupré}}</ref> where, he later said, he "diligently attended the racecourse at Newmarket", losing £6,000 in gambling in two years.<ref>Thorold, p. 22</ref>{{refn|Labouchère remained an avid gambler and is credited with devising the [[Labouchere system]], a betting strategy for organising play at roulette and other games of chance.<ref>Holmes, Luke. [https://www.roulettesites.org/strategies/labouchere "The Labouchere System – Analysis & Review"], Roulettesites.org., accessed 17 June 2021</ref>|group=n}} He was accused of cheating in an examination, and his degree was withheld.<ref>Thorold, p. 26</ref> Leaving Cambridge, he was sent to South America to look after family business interests there; however, he ended up working in a [[circus troupe]] in Mexico and lived for several months in an [[Ojibwe]] camp near Minneapolis.<ref name=odnb/> ==Early diplomatic and political career== [[File:Henry Labouchère Vanity Fair 1874-11-07.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Caricature of Labouchère by [[Carlo Pellegrini (caricaturist)|Ape]] in ''[[Vanity Fair (British magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', 1874]] While he was in the US, Labouchère (without his prior knowledge) was found a place in the British diplomatic service by his family. Between 1854 and 1864, he served as a minor diplomat in [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]], Munich, [[Stockholm]], Frankfurt, [[Saint Petersburg]], [[Dresden]], and [[Constantinople]]. He was, however, not known for his diplomatic demeanour, and acted impudently on occasion.<ref name=odnb/> He went too far when he wrote to the Foreign Secretary to refuse a posting offered to him, "I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your Lordship's despatch, informing me of my promotion as Second Secretary to Her Majesty's Legation at Buenos Ayres. I beg to state that, if residing at Baden-Baden I can fulfil those duties, I shall be pleased to accept the appointment." He was politely told that there was no further use for his services.<ref>Thorold, p. 65</ref> The year after his dismissal, Labouchère was elected at the [[1865 United Kingdom general election|1865 general election]] as a member of parliament (MP) for [[Windsor (UK Parliament constituency)|Windsor]],<ref>{{London Gazette |issue= 22991 |date=14 July 1865 |page=3529 }}</ref> as a [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]]. However, that election was overturned on petition,<ref name=odnb/> and in April 1867 he was elected at a by-election as an MP for [[Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency)|Middlesex]].<ref>{{London Gazette |issue= 23242 |date=16 April 1867 |page=2310 }}</ref> At the [[1868 United Kingdom general election|1868 election]] he lost the seat by 110 votes.<ref>"Election Intelligence", ''The Times'', 27 November 1868, p. 5</ref> He did not return to the [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]] for 12 years.<ref name=odnb/> ==Theatre producer, journalist and writer== In 1867, Labouchère and his partners engaged the architect [[Charles J. Phipps|C. J. Phipps]] and the artists [[Albert Joseph Moore|Albert Moore]] and Telbin to remodel the large St. Martins Hall to create [[Queen's Theatre, Long Acre]].<ref>Sherson, p. 201</ref> A new company of players was formed, including [[Charles Wyndham (actor)|Charles Wyndham]], [[Henry Irving]], [[John Lawrence Toole|J. L. Toole]], [[Ellen Terry]], and [[Henrietta Hodson]]. By 1868, Hodson and Labouchère were living together out of wedlock,<ref>[http://www.labouchere.co.uk/linkpages/labbyanddora.htm ''Labby and Dora''], Labouchere.co.uk, accessed 1 April 2008</ref> as they could not marry until her first husband died in 1887.<ref name=NYTLondonFacts>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1883/01/17/106245396.pdf ''London Facts and Gossip''], ''[[The New York Times]]'', 17 January 1883, accessed 1 April 2008</ref> Labouchère bought out his partners and used the theatre to promote Hodson's talents;<ref>[http://www.gabrielleray.150m.com/ArchiveTextH/HenriettaHodson.html Feature on Hodson in Footlights Notes] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707060227/http://www.gabrielleray.150m.com/ArchiveTextH/HenriettaHodson.html |date=7 July 2011 }}</ref> the theatre made a loss, Hodson retired, and the theatre closed in 1879. The couple finally married in 1887.<ref name=Tmuseum>[http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/detail.asp?ContentID=77 "Henry Du Pre Labouchere"], The Twickenham Museum, accessed 3 March 2014</ref> They had one child together, Mary Dorothea (Dora) Labouchère (1884–1944).<ref name=odnb/> [[Image:His Excellency - Labouchere.png|thumb|right|270px|Third verse of "When a gentleman supposes" from ''[[His Excellency (opera)|His Excellency]]'' by [[W. S. Gilbert]].]] During the break in his Parliamentary career, Labouchère gained renown as a journalist, editor, and publisher, sending witty dispatches from Paris during the [[Siege of Paris (1870–71)|Siege of Paris]] in 1870–1871, noting the eating of [[Castor and Pollux (elephants)|zoo elephants]], donkeys, cats and rats when food supplies ran low.<ref>Thorold, pp. 125–140</ref> This series of articles helped restore the circulation of the ''[[Daily News (UK)|Daily News]]'', in which he had bought a stake in 1868. His unflinching style gained a large audience for first his reporting, and later his personal weekly journal, [[Truth (British periodical)|''Truth'']] (started in 1876), which was often sued for libel.<ref>''The Times'', 31 December 1957, p. 6</ref> With his inherited wealth, he could afford to defend such suits.<ref name=odnb/> Labouchère's claims to being impartial were ridiculed by his critics, including [[W. S. Gilbert]] (who had been an object of Labouchère's theatrical criticism) in Gilbert's [[comic opera]] ''[[His Excellency (opera)|His Excellency]]'' (''see illustration at right''). In 1877, Gilbert had engaged in a public feud with Labouchère's lover Henrietta Hodson.<ref>Vorder Bruegge, Andrew ([[Winthrop University]]). [http://faculty.winthrop.edu/vorderbruegg/winthropweb/vitaindex/gilbert.html "W. S. Gilbert: Antiquarian Authenticity and Artistic Autocracy"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110510212618/http://faculty.winthrop.edu/vorderbruegg/winthropweb/vitaindex/gilbert.html |date=10 May 2011 }} . Paper presented at the Victorian Interdisciplinary Studies Association of the Western United States annual conference in October 2002, accessed 26 March 2008</ref> Labouchère was a vehement opponent of feminism; he campaigned in ''Truth'' against the suffrage movement, ridiculing and belittling women who sought the right to vote.<ref name=vpr>Hirshfield, Claire. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/20082684 "Labouchere, ''Truth'' and the Uses of Antisemitism"], ''Victorian Periodicals Review'', Vol. 26, No. 3 (Fall, 1993), pp. 134–142</ref> He was also a virulent anti-semite, opposed to Jewish participation in British life, using ''Truth'' to campaign against "Hebrew barons" and their supposedly excessive influence, "Jewish exclusivity" and "Jewish cowardice".<ref name=vpr/> One of the victims of his attacks was [[Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron Burnham|Edward Levy-Lawson]], proprietor of ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]''.<ref name=vpr/> In 1879 there was a much-reported court case following a fracas on the doorstep of the [[Beefsteak Club]] between Labouchère and Levy-Lawson. The committee of the club expelled Labouchère, who successfully sought a court ruling that they had no right to do so.<ref name=times1879>"High Court of Justice, Nov. 28, Chancery Division", ''The Times'', 29 November 1879, p. 4</ref> ==Return to Parliament== [[Image:Punch - Henry Labouchere.png|1881 ''[[Punch (magazine)|Punch]]'' cartoon|left|thumb|upright]] Labouchère returned to Parliament in the [[1880 United Kingdom general election|1880 election]], when he and [[Charles Bradlaugh]], both Liberals, won the two seats for [[Northampton (UK Parliament constituency)|Northampton]]. (Bradlaugh's then-controversial atheism led Labouchère, a closet agnostic, to refer sardonically to himself as "the Christian member for Northampton".)<ref name=odnb/> In 1884, Labouchère unsuccessfully proposed legislation to extend the existing laws against cruelty to animals.<ref>[https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1885/aug/06/consideration#S3V0300P0_18850806_HOC_209 "Cruelty to Animals Acts Extension Bill"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211003015237/http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1885/aug/06/consideration#S3V0300P0_18850806_HOC_209 |date=3 October 2021 }}, Hansard, 7 February 1884</ref> In 1885, Labouchère, whose libertarian stances did not preclude a fierce [[homophobia]],<ref name=odnb/> drafted the [[Labouchere Amendment|Labouchère Amendment]] as a last-minute addition to a Parliamentary Bill that had nothing to do with homosexuality.{{#tag:ref|The [[Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885|Criminal Law Amendment Bill, 1885]] was introduced to outlaw sex between men and underage girls.<ref>[http://www.swarb.co.uk/acts/1885Criminal_Law_AmendmentAct.shtml Text of the 1885 Act], accessed 7 March 2012</ref>|group= n}} His amendment outlawed "gross indecency"; [[sodomy]] was already a crime, but Labouchère's Amendment now criminalised any sexual activity between men.{{#tag:ref|Labouchère's contemporary [[Frank Harris]] wrote that Labouchère proposed the amendment to make the law seem "ridiculous" and so discredit it in its entirety; some historians agree, citing Labouchère's habitual obstructionism and other attempts to sink this bill by the same means. Others write that Labouchère's role in the [[Cleveland Street scandal]] makes it plain that he was strongly in favour of using the criminal law to control male sexuality, despite his own irregular private life.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Sodom on the Thames: sex, love, and scandal in Wilde times |first=Morris B. |last=Kaplan |url=https://archive.org/details/sodomonthamessex00kapl |url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/sodomonthamessex00kapl/page/175 175]|year=2005 |publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=9780801436789 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Who's who in gay and lesbian history: from antiquity to World War II |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zLWTqBmifh0C&pg=PA298 |page=298 |publisher=Psychology Press |year=2003 |isbn = 9780415159838|editor-first=Robert |editor-last=Aldrich |editor2-first=Garry |editor2-last=Wotherspoon}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Talk on the Wilde side: toward a genealogy of a discourse on male sexualities |first=Ed |last=Cohen |publisher=Psychology Press |year=1993 |page=92 |isbn=9780415902304 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_CZb6HwCPMcC&pg=PA92}}</ref>|group= n}} Ten years later the Labouchère Amendment allowed for the prosecution of [[Oscar Wilde]], who was given the maximum sentence of two years' imprisonment with hard labour.<ref name=odnb/> Labouchère expressed regret that Wilde's sentence was so short, and would have preferred the seven-year term he had originally proposed in the Amendment.<ref name=odnb/> [[Image:Labouchere and Gladstone.png|thumb|upright|1892 cartoon of Labouchère as a hungry tramp; Gladstone eyes him from within the parliamentary bakery.]] During the 1880s, the Liberal Party faced a split between a Radical wing (led by [[Joseph Chamberlain]]) and a Whig wing (led by the [[Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire|Marquess of Hartington]]), with its party leader, [[William Ewart Gladstone]] straddling the middle. Labouchère was a firm and vocal Radical, who tried to create a governing coalition between the Radicals and the [[Irish Nationalists]] that would exclude or marginalise the Whigs. This plan was wrecked in 1886, when, after Gladstone came out for [[Home Rule]], a large contingent of both Radicals and Whigs chose to leave the Liberal Party to form the [[Liberal Unionist Party]] allied with the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]].<ref name=odnb/> Between 1886 and 1892, a Conservative government was in power, and Labouchère worked tirelessly to remove them from office. When the government was turned out in 1892, and Gladstone was called to form an administration, Labouchère expected to be rewarded with a cabinet post.<ref name=odnb/> [[Queen Victoria]] refused to allow Gladstone to offer either Labouchère or [[Charles Dilke]] an office, however, as she had a strong personal dislike of them – "she would ''never'' allow such horrid men to enter the Gov<sup>t</sup>".<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Ponsonby |editor1-first=Arthur |title=Henry Ponsonby: His Life From His Letters |date=1943 |page=215 |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.211236/page/n257/mode/2up}}</ref> Her dislike of Labouchère stemmed from his editorship of ''Truth'', which she felt had insulted the Royal Family.<ref name=Bogdanor34>Bogdanor, p. 34</ref> According to the historian [[Vernon Bogdanor]], this was the last time a British monarch vetoed a prime minister's appointment of a cabinet minister.<ref name=Bogdanor34/>{{#tag:ref|[[Francis Beckett]] (quoting from the diaries of [[Alan Lascelles|Sir Alan Lascelles]]) claims otherwise, suggesting that [[George VI of the United Kingdom|George VI]] vetoed the appointment of [[Hugh Dalton]] as foreign secretary by [[Clement Attlee]] in 1945.<ref>Beckett, p. 199</ref> [[Roy Jenkins]], however, notes that Attlee ignored the king's advice, which was given on 26 July 1945, and offered the foreign secretaryship to Dalton the following day, later changing his mind after receiving representations from [[Herbert Morrison]] and senior civil servants.<ref>Jenkins, pp. 447–448</ref>|group= n}} However, Gladstone may have been happy to drop Labouchère given his lack of political support.<ref name=Bogdanor34/> Likewise, the new foreign secretary, [[Archibald Philip Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery|Lord Rosebery]], a personal enemy of Labouchère, declined to offer him the ambassadorship to Washington for which Labouchère had asked.<ref name=odnb/> [[Image:South Africa Committee Vanity Fair 1897-11-25.jpg|thumb|"Empire Makers and Breakers": scene at the South Africa Committee 1897. Left to right: [[Richard Webster, 1st Viscount Alverstone|Richard Webster]], Labouchère, [[Cecil Rhodes]], [[William Harcourt (politician)|William Harcourt]], [[Joseph Chamberlain]]]] Through the 1890s, Labouchère was a critic of both Liberal and Conservative Imperial policies; he demanded an enquiry into Rhodesian policy in 1893–94, and in 1895 sat on the commission enquiring into the [[Jameson Raid]]. However, his position became gradually alienated from his party and from public opinion, as he strongly opposed the [[South African War]] and argued for peace.<ref name=odnb/> His reputation was also tarnished by a series of financial scandals: in 1897, he was accused in the press of share-rigging, using ''Truth'' to disparage companies, advising shareholders to dispose of their shares and, when the share prices fell as a result, buying them himself at a low price. He failed to reply to the accusations, and his reputation suffered.<ref>[https://www.jstor.org/stable/60216993 "The stock-jobbing of Henry Labouchere"], LSE Selected Pamphlets, 1897, accessed 28 May 2011 {{subscription required}}</ref> A later pamphlet by Henry Hess of ''The Critic'', in 1905, revealed further financial misdealings.<ref name=odnb/> ==Retirement== When the [[Liberal government, 1905–1915|Liberal party took power in December 1905]], Labouchère was not offered any political office by [[Henry Campbell-Bannerman]], the new prime minister. He was disappointed in this – he had been a strong supporter of Campbell-Bannerman – and retired from Parliament the following month, choosing not to stand at the [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906 general election]]. His only political reward from the new government was a [[Privy Council of the United Kingdom|privy councillorship]].<ref name=odnb/> He retired to [[Florence]], Italy, where he died seven years later, leaving a fortune of half a million pounds sterling{{#tag:ref|£500,000 in 1912 equates to around £{{Inflation|UK|500,000|1912|r=-4|fmt=c}} in {{CURRENTYEAR}}, according to calculations based on the [[Consumer Price Index (United Kingdom)|Consumer Price Index]] measure of inflation.{{inflation-fn|UK|df=y}}|group= n}} to his daughter Dora, who was by then married to Carlo, Marchese di Rudini.<ref name=odnb/> ==Sources== * {{cite book|title=[[Clement Attlee]]|first=Francis|last=Beckett|author-link = Francis Beckett |publisher=Politico's Publishing Limited|year=2000|isbn=1-902301-70-6|page=199 |ref=none}} * {{cite book|last= Bogdanor |first= Vernon |year= 1997|title= The Monarchy and the Constitution |location=Oxford |publisher= Oxford University Press |isbn= 0-19-829334-8 |ref=none}} * {{cite book|last=Jenkins |first=Roy |year=1998 |title=The Chancellors |location=London |publisher=Macmillan |isbn=0-333-73057-7 |ref=none}} * {{cite book|last= Sherson |first =Erroll |year= 1925|title= London's Lost Theatres of the Nineteenth Century |location=London |publisher=Bodley Head |oclc=51413815 |ref=none}} * {{cite book|last= Thorold |first= Algar |year= 1913|title=The Life of Henry Labouchere |location= New York and London |publisher= G. P. Putnam's Sons |oclc= 400277 | url=https://archive.org/details/lifeofhenrylabou00thor |ref=none}}<ref>{{cite journal|journal=The Athenaeum|title=Review of ''The Life of Henry Labouchere'' by Algar Thorold|date=18 October 1913|issue= 4486|pages=409–411|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.c109524956;view=1up;seq=427}}</ref> ==Further reading== * {{cite book|last= Russell |first= George W. E. |author-link= George W. E. Russell |year=1916 |title= Portraits of the Seventies|location= London |publisher= Fisher Unwin |oclc=221085405 |url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000107598 |ref=none}} * [http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/detail.asp?ContentID=77 "Henry Du Pre Labouchere"]. The Twickenham Museum. ==Works (examples)== * [https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/008687838 Diary of the besieged resident in Paris], Hurst and Blackett, London 1871 * [http://www.swans.com/library/art8/xxx074.html The Brown Man's Burden], a parody by Labouchère of Rudyard Kipling's "[[The White Man's Burden]]"; ''Truth'' and ''Literary Digest'' (Feb. 1899) ==Notes and references== ;Notes {{Reflist|group=n}} ;References {{Reflist|colwidth=25em}} ==External links== {{wikiquote}} {{Commons category|Henry Labouchère}} * {{Hansard-contribs | mr-henry-labouchere | Henry Labouchère }} * {{Gutenberg author |id=8568 | name=Henry Labouchere}} * {{Gutenberg |no=75377 |title=The life of Henry Labouchere |author=Algar Labouchere Thorold}} * {{Internet Archive author |sname=Henry Labouchère |sopt=w}} * {{Cite NIE|wstitle=Labouchere, Henry DuPré|short=x}} {{S-start}} {{s-par|uk}} {{s-bef | before = [[Richard Howard-Vyse|Richard Vyse]]<br />[[William Vansittart]] }} {{s-ttl | title = Member of Parliament for [[Windsor (UK Parliament constituency)|Windsor]] | years = [[1865 United Kingdom general election|1865]] – [[1866 Windsor by-election|1866]] | with = [[Sir Henry Hoare, 5th Baronet|Sir Henry Hoare, Bt]] }} {{s-aft | after = [[Charles Edwards (MP for Windsor)|Charles Edwards]]<br />[[Roger Eykyn (politician)|Roger Eykyn]] }} {{s-bef | before = [[Robert Culling Hanbury]]<br />[[George Byng, 3rd Earl of Strafford|George Byng]] }} {{s-ttl | title = Member of Parliament for [[Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency)|Middlesex]] | years = [[1867 Middlesex by-election|1867]] – [[1868 United Kingdom general election|1868]] | with = [[George Byng, 3rd Earl of Strafford|George Byng]] }} {{s-aft | after = [[Lord George Hamilton]]<br />[[George Byng, 3rd Earl of Strafford|George Byng]] }} {{succession box | title = Member of Parliament for [[Northampton (UK Parliament constituency)|Northampton]] | years = [[1880 United Kingdom general election|1880]] – [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906]] | with = [[Charles Bradlaugh]] 1880–1891 | with2 = [[Moses Manfield]] 1891–1895 | with3 = [[Adolphus Drucker|Charles Drucker]] 1895–1900 | with4 = [[John Greenwood Shipman]] from 1900 | before = [[Pickering Phipps (MP)|Pickering Phipps]]<br />[[Charles Merewether]] | after = [[Herbert Paul]]<br />[[John Greenwood Shipman]] }} {{S-end}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Labouchere, Henry}} [[Category:1831 births]] [[Category:1912 deaths]] [[Category:19th-century English diarists]] [[Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge]] [[Category:Antisemitism in the United Kingdom]] [[Category:British emigrants to Italy]] [[Category:English agnostics]] [[Category:English people of French descent]] [[Category:English satirists]] [[Category:LGBTQ law in the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies]] [[Category:Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom]] [[Category:People educated at Eton College]] [[Category:People from Mole Valley (district)]] [[Category:UK MPs 1865–1868]] [[Category:UK MPs 1880–1885]] [[Category:UK MPs 1885–1886]] [[Category:UK MPs 1886–1892]] [[Category:UK MPs 1892–1895]] [[Category:UK MPs 1895–1900]] [[Category:UK MPs 1900–1906]] [[Category:Writers from Surrey]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page
(
help
)
:
Template:Acad
(
edit
)
Template:Authority control
(
edit
)
Template:Citation needed
(
edit
)
Template:Cite NIE
(
edit
)
Template:Cite book
(
edit
)
Template:Cite journal
(
edit
)
Template:Cite odnb
(
edit
)
Template:Commons category
(
edit
)
Template:EngvarB
(
edit
)
Template:For
(
edit
)
Template:Gutenberg
(
edit
)
Template:Gutenberg author
(
edit
)
Template:Hansard-contribs
(
edit
)
Template:Inflation
(
edit
)
Template:Inflation-fn
(
edit
)
Template:Infobox officeholder
(
edit
)
Template:Internet Archive author
(
edit
)
Template:London Gazette
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:Refn
(
edit
)
Template:S-aft
(
edit
)
Template:S-bef
(
edit
)
Template:S-end
(
edit
)
Template:S-par
(
edit
)
Template:S-start
(
edit
)
Template:S-ttl
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)
Template:Sister project
(
edit
)
Template:Subscription required
(
edit
)
Template:Succession box
(
edit
)
Template:Use dmy dates
(
edit
)
Template:Webarchive
(
edit
)
Template:Wikiquote
(
edit
)