Walter Rice, 7th Baron Dynevor

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Walter FitzUryan Rice, 7th Baron Dynevor (17 August 1873 – 8 June 1956) was a British military officer, civil servant and Conservative politician. He was the only son and heir of the 6th Baron Dynevor.

Early life and family

He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford. On graduating from Oxford, he served in the Carmarthen Artillery for twelve years, rising to the rank of Captain.

On 12 October 1898, he married Lady Margaret Child Villiers (8 October 1875 – 1 April 1959), daughter of Victor Child Villiers, 7th Earl of Jersey and Margaret Elizabeth (née Leigh), Countess of Jersey, DBE.

The 7th Baron had the following children:

Political career

From 1899 to 1903, the Hon. Walter Rice was assistant private secretary to Lord Hamilton, Secretary of State for India. From 1903 to 1905, he was assistant secretary to the First Lord of the Admiralty, Lord Selborne. After the Conservative government resigned in 1905, Rice travelled extensively in the Middle East and the Orient.

In January 1910, he was elected MP for Brighton, being re-elected in December. His majority of 4,000 was, he was to comment later, unusually high in a period when average electorates were not large. In 1911, the Hon. Walter Rice became 7th Baron Dynevor on the death of his father. Thereafter, he became increasingly involved with the politics of his native Carmarthenshire. Vice-president of the Carmarthenshire Conservatives in 1912, he was also President of the West Wales Conservatives to 1914, when Conservative re-organisation saw him become President of the South Wales Conservatives, a post he held until 1938.

During the Great War, Lord Dynevor served in the Ministry of Munitions from 1916. Thereafter, he served on the Unionist Devolution Committee, considering the recommendations of the Speaker's Conference on Devolution. In 1919, he was elected to the Carmarthenshire County Council for Llandeilo, capturing a traditionally Liberal seat as an independent. He retained this seat until increasing deafness forced him to resign in 1935.

Throughout the inter-war years, Lord Dynevor was a key figure in Welsh Conservative politics, as well as the Carmarthenshire territorials. In 1928, Lord Dynevor became Lord Lieutenant of Carmarthenshire. Forced to resign from his offices in 1938 due to increasing deafness, Lord Dynevor was praised for his record of public service.

Writings

In addition to his public duties, Lord Dynevor wrote two books, My Reminiscences, published in 1937, which comprises a short memoir, and a book on the trees in the park at Dynevor.

Legacy

  • In 1916 displaying Welshness had become sufficiently fashionable for Lord Dynevor to adopt (by royal licence) the older, Welsh form of his surname, "Rhys". In 1906 Rice Street in Betws had been named after him.

Death

Lord Dynevor died on 8 June 1956, aged 82. He was succeeded by his son, the Hon. Charles Arthur FitzUryan Rhys as 8th Baron.

Sources

References

Bibliography

Records
  • Carmarthenshire Record Office, Dynevor Papers Add Mss 4, polling figures for Llandeilo election
  • CRO Dynevor Papers, Box 114
  • Dynevor Papers, Box 266/9, 'The Home-Coming of the Hon. Walter Rice and His Bride'
  • Conservative election address, Brighton, January 1910
Newspapers
  • Lord Dynevor's Address to the electors of Llandeilo, February, 1919;
  • South Wales Evening Post, 26 February 1938
  • Taliaris Papers, box 441
  • Lord Dynevor, My Reminiscences (Carmarthen, 1937)

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Brighton
January 19101911
With: George Tryon
Succeeded by
John Edward Gordon
George Tryon
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Carmarthenshire
1928 – 1949
Succeeded by
George Clark Williams
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Baron Dynevor
1911 – 1956
Succeeded by
Charles Arthur Uryan Rhys