James Stansfield
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Sir James Stansfield (October 5, 1820 - February 17, 1898), English politician, was born at Moorlands, Halifax, the son of James Stansfeld, a county-court judge.
Educated at University College, London, he was called to the bar in 1849. In 1847, he was introduced through his father-in-law, WH Ashurst, to Giuseppe Mazzini, with whom he formed a close friendship. In 1859, he was returned to Parliament as Radical member for Halifax, which he continued to represent for over thirty-six years. He voted consistently on the Radical side, but his chief energies were devoted to promoting the cause of Italian unity.
He was selected by Giuseppe Garibaldi as his adviser when the Italian patriot visited England in 1862. In 1863, he moved in the House of Commons a resolution of sympathy with the Poles, and two months later was made a junior lord of the admiralty. In 1864, as the result of charges made against him by the French authorities, in connection with Greco's conspiracy against Napoleon III, Disraeli, in the House of Commons, accused him of being in correspondence with the assassins of Europe.
Stansfeld was vigorously defended by John Bright and William Edward Forster, and his explanation was accepted as quite satisfactory by Palmerston. Nevertheless he only escaped a vote of censure by ten votes, and accordingly resigned office. In 1865, he was re-elected for Halifax, and in 1866 became under-secretary of state for India. In the first William Gladstone administration he held a variety of public offices, finally becoming, in 1871, the first president of the local government board.
The remainder of his life was mainly spent in endeavouring to secure the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts, and in 1886 this object was attained. In the same year Stansfeld again became president of the local government board.
Preceded by: New office |
President of the Local Government Board 1871–1874 |
Succeeded by: George Sclater-Booth |
Preceded by: Joseph Chamberlain |
President of the Local Government Board 1886 |
Succeeded by: Charles Thomson Ritchie |
[edit] Reference
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.