From Wikipedia
Charles Roden Buxton (27 November 1875 – 16 December 1942) was an
English philanthropist and politician.
He was born in London, the third son of
Sir Thomas Buxton, 3rd Baronet. His elder brother
Noel Buxton was a prominent figure in British politics, as was his cousin
Sidney Buxton.
He grew up on the family estate in Essex and was educated at
Harrow and
Trinity College, Cambridge, taking a first in Classics and becoming president of the
Cambridge Union.[1] After leaving university he travelled to
South Australia, where his father was
Governor, as well as other locations in France, the Far East, India and America.
He took up law and was called to the bar in 1902. He gave lectures at
Morley College and was principal there from 1902 to 1910. He wrote articles on various subjects and edited the Albany Review from 1906 to 1908.
In 1904 he married Dorothy Frances Jebb. The Jebbs, apart from being a well-off family, also had a strong social conscience and commitment to public service; her mother,
Eglantyne Louisa Jebb, had founded the
Home Arts and Industries Association, to promote Arts and Crafts among young people in rural areas, her sister Louisa would help found the
Women's Land Army in
World War I, and Dorothy and her sister
Eglantyne Jebb co-founded the international charity and movement
Save the Children.
The Buxtons lived a frugal lifestyle - on their walking tours in the south of England, they were sometimes mistaken for tramps - and moved to
Kennington, a working class area of London. They had two children and later moved to the more affluent area of
Golders Green.
He stood as a Liberal candidate in
Hertford in 1906 and
Ashburton in 1908. Eventually he was elected as a
member of Parliament in
Ashburton in 1910 but lost his seat in the second election of that year. In 1914 he went to
Bulgaria with his brother Noel and was wounded in an attack by a Turkish assassin. He was shot through the lung, but survived.
During the
First World War, he was one of the minority arguing for a negotiated peace and was a founder member of the
Union of Democratic Control. In 1917 he left the Liberal Party and joined the
Independent Labour Party. As secretary to the Labour Party's delegation to the
Soviet Union in 1920, he was very impressed by what he saw, and wrote a book about it, In A Russian Village (1922). In 1918 he contested
Accrington for the Labour Party and lost, won the seat in 1922, and lost again in 1923. He won the seat of
Elland in 1929, but was defeated in 1931 and 1935.
Buxton was always much more effective behind the scenes, acting as policy advisor on foreign and colonial issues to the Labour Party. He showed particular interest in the rights of indigenous people of Africa, and travelled widely in the continent.
Another of his interests was
Esperanto, becoming president of the British Esperantists.
With Dorothy, he became a member of the
Society of Friends. They were eager campaigners for peace, and were critical of what they perceived as the unfairness to Germany of the
treaty of Versailles. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II they still argued that peace could be attained by responding to German grievances. The outbreak of war was a great disappointment to them both. Charles retired from politics in 1939 and lived in his daughter's house in
Peaslake, Surrey, where he died and was buried in 1942. Although he had two children, he left most of his estate to charity.
From Venn’s
Adm. pens. at TRINITY, June 25, 1894. 3rd s. of Sir Thomas Fowell, Bart. (1854), of Warlies, Waltham Abbey, Essex.
B. there Nov. 27, 1875.
School, Harrow; Entrance Exhibitioner.
Matric. Michs. 1894; Scholar, 1895; Prizeman; B.A. (Class.
Trip., Pt I, 1st Class) 1898; M.A. 1901.
President of the Union, 1897.
Adm. at the Inner Temple, 1898.
Called to the Bar, 1902.
On the South Eastern Circuit.
Principal of Morley College (for working men and women) 1902-10.
First President of the South London Branch of the Workers' Educational Association.
M.P. for Ashburton, 1910; for Accrington, 1922-3; for Elland, 1929-31.
Treasurer to the Independent Labour Party, 1924-7. Parliamentary Adviser to the Labour Party 1926.
Early in the Great War wounded by a Turkish assassin, when on a political mission to secure the adhesion of Bulgaria to the Allied cause.
Of 6, Erskine Hill, Golders Green, N.W. Married and had issue.
Author, Turkey in Revolution; The A.B.C. Home Rule Handbook; Shouted Down; The War and the Balkans (with Lord Noel Buxton); The World after the War; Essays on English Literature; The Race Problem in Africa (1931); The Alternative to War (1936), etc.
Brother of Harold J. (1898), etc.
(Who's Who, 1939.)