Alfred Roberts

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Alfred Roberts
Mayor of Grantham
Personal details
Born(1892-04-18)18 April 1892
Ringstead, Northamptonshire, England
Died10 February 1970(1970-02-10) (aged 77)
Grantham, Lincolnshire, England
Political partyIndependent
Spouses
Beatrice Stephenson
(m. 1917; died 1960)
Cecily Hubbard
(m. 1965)
Children2 (by Stephenson, including Margaret Thatcher)
Relatives
Occupation

Alfred Roberts

prime minister of the United Kingdom
.

Early life

Roberts was born in Ringstead, Northamptonshire. He was the fifth of seven children. His father was Benjamin Ebenezer Roberts (28 December 1857 – 17 September 1925), from a Ringstead family, and his mother was Ellen Smith (20 November 1857 – 1 May 1935), whose own mother, Catherine Sullivan, was born at Kenmare in Ireland.[1] Ellen's eldest two known siblings were also born in Ireland and her twin brothers in England in 1852.[citation needed] The gap in age between Alfred's aunt Mary and his uncles of around nine years coincides with the Great Famine.[citation needed] It more than likely meant that other siblings perished through starvation or associated diseases.[citation needed] His grandparents possibly left Kenmare in 1849–51, and two million more came destitute to England.[citation needed] This and the family's hard times may have much to do with the reluctance to acknowledge his being part Irish to his daughters.[citation needed]

Roberts's bad eyesight meant he could not enter the family trade of

British Army
six times but was rejected because of his weak eyesight.

Finkin Street Wesleyan Chapel
(pictured in 2006)

Four years after moving to Grantham, Roberts met Beatrice Ethel Stephenson (24 August 1888[3]: 4  – 7 December 1960[4]: 104) through the Finkin Street Methodist Church, which he attended every Sunday. They married in Grantham on 28 May 1917. They had two daughters, both born in Grantham: Muriel Cullen (24 May 1921[4]: 9 – 3 December 2004[5]) and Margaret Thatcher. In 1919, they bought the grocery shop, and in 1923, Roberts opened a second shop.

Politics

Roberts was an "

Victor Warrender to win the Grantham constituency
.

In 1927, Roberts was elected to the Grantham town council as an

civil defence.[3]: 12  He soon became Chairman of the Finance and Rating Committee and, in 1943, was elected by the council as Alderman; he served as Mayor of Grantham from November 1945 to 1946, in which he presided over the town's victory celebrations. In his inaugural speech, Roberts called for an extensive programme of expenditure to rebuild the roads, public transport, health and social services for children and to "build houses by the thousand".[7]: 10

External image
Photo of Roberts laying down his robes as Alderman (voted out by Labour)
image icon "The picture was published in the paper on 23 May 1952 when Alderman Roberts was voted off the council by the new Labour majority. The event caused great distress to the Roberts family."[8]

On 21 May 1952, Roberts was voted out as Alderman by the first Labour majority on the council, and after the vote was taken, he proclaimed: "It is now almost nine years since I took up these robes in honour, and now I trust in honour they are laid down."[2]: 21 When his daughter Margaret recalled this event, over thirty years later as Prime Minister during an interview with Miriam Stoppard, she said that it was "very emotional" and wept on television.[7]: 308 

Personal life

Roberts retired and sold his business in 1958 but continued after that to preach and remained active in the

Rotary Club. Beatrice died in 1960.[citation needed
]

On 26 November 1965, Roberts married again; his second wife was Cissie Miriam Hubbard (née Freeston), born 16 March 1896 in Long Bennington, Lincolnshire.[9][verification needed]

Roberts died on 10 February 1970, four months before the general election at which Edward Heath became Prime Minister. Shortly after this victory, Heath appointed Margaret to the cabinet, beginning her ministerial path to the top of government in 1979.[3][page needed]

In 1997, the satirical magazine Punch published an article by Professor Bernard Crick featuring allegations, including one from an alleged victim, that Roberts had been involved in several sexual assaults on women. Crick had tried to put the allegations into the public domain before both the 1987 and 1997 elections but had been rebuffed by various publications. The article claimed that Roberts was an inspiration for a lecherous character who was a local councillor and grocer in the 1937 satire of Grantham, Rotten Borough.[10] John Campbell, the biographer of his daughter Margaret Thatcher, believes that these allegations were unsubstantiated and dismissed by people who knew him and that the character in Rotten Borough was a parody of another prominent councillor at the time.[3][page needed]

References

  1. Lincolnshire History and Archaeology
    . 42: 40–42.
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ Davies, David Twiston and Sally Pook (4 December 2004). "Thatcher's sister and 'best friend' dies". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 3 July 2018. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  6. .
  7. ^ .
  8. ^ Dean, Peter (21 May 1952). "Photo of Alfred Roberts laying down his robes as Alderman (voted out by Labour)". Grantham Journal. Retrieved 27 May 2017 – via the Margaret Thatcher Foundation.
  9. ^ Birth & Baptism Records (1896); Census Record (1939); Marriage Record (1965); Death & Probate Records (1988).
  10. ^ Nuthall, Keith (22 June 1997). "Thatcher's dad: mayor, preacher, groper". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 August 2009. Retrieved 14 April 2013.