Horace
Maybray King, Baron Maybray-King, PC (25
May 1901 – 3 September 1986) was a British politician who served as a Member of Parliament (MP)
from 1950 until 1971 before becoming a life peer. For most of his time in Parliament, he sat as
a Labour MP. Following
the death of Harry Hylton-Foster in
September 1965, King, who had served as deputy speaker for ten months, became
the Speaker of the House of Commons. As was customary, he
renounced his party allegiance upon taking up the post.[1] He was the first person from the Labour Party
to hold the post. Horace King was born in Grangetown near Middlesbrough. His father John William King was an insurance
salesman and Methodist local preacher. He was educated at Stockton Secondary
School, Stockton-on-Tees, from 1912 to 1917 and never lost touch with these
local roots. Horace attended King's College London and
graduated with a first-class bachelor's degree in English. Upon graduating in
1922 King worked as a teacher in Taunton's School in Southampton. He became head of the English department in 1927.
While working as a teacher, King studied part-time for his Ph.D. His thesis was
on the Folios of Shakespeare. He received his doctorate from King's College London in
1940. He had been excused from military service during World War II due to a duodenal ulcer. He and his family—first wife Victoria Florence
(née Harris) and daughter Margaret—and Taunton's school were evacuated to
Bournemouth from Southampton in 1940. Among the many pupils was
15-year-old Benny Hill. King was
always a keen musician, playing the piano, piano-accordion and organ. During
the Second World War he formed various concert parties—"The V Concert
Party" was one—which toured the smaller outlying military bases and
entertained troops not often reached by ENSA. He also raised funds by
organising concerts to "buy" Spitfires and send aid to Russia. He is
believed to have instigated fund raising in Hampshire by letters he wrote to
the Hampshire Chronicle in July and August 1940. His
"Spitfire Song" was recorded by Joe Loss and his Orchestra.[2] He and a teacher colleague also were the first
to translate "Lili Marlene" but
were too slow to get their version to the song-publishing market. He left
Taunton's in 1947 to become headteacher of Regent's Park Secondary School. King
first stood as a Labour party candidate in the 1945 general
election. Labour won with a massive landslide, but King was
unsuccessful in his attempt to take the ultra-safe Conservative seat
of New Forest and Christchurch. The following year he was elected
to Hampshire County Council,
on which he served until 1965 with only a single three-year break. His wife,
Victoria Florence King, was also politically active - a town councillor and
Mayor of Southampton in coronation year, 1953.
She received a posthumous OBE.