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John Henry Whitley

John Henry Whitley (18661935), often known as J. H. Whitley, was a respected and successful British politician whose life and career spanned a period of significant social change, from roots in the heart of the Industrial Revolution through to the inter-war period.

Contents


Family and early career

John Henry Whitley was born in Halifax, Yorkshire, early in 1866. His father, Nathan Whitley (1830-1889) from Ovenden had married Martha Grey, (born 1825, Soyland) in 1850. Nathan worked as a carpet weaver, and subsequently as a card maker. Martha died before 1871 and Nathan's elser sister, Mary, lived with the family for a while, presumably helping care for John Henry and his sisters. Nathan remarried in 1873 to Sarah Higgs (born Halifax 1836). Nathan went on to serve as Mayor of Halifax (1876-1877), succeeding Edward Crossley, son of another local carpet manufacturer, John Crossley.

After an early education boarding at Clifton College, John Henry entered his uncle, Samuel Whitley's cotton spinning business, Whitley & Co. at Hanson Lane Mills, Skircoat, Halifax.

In 1892, John Henry married Margherita Virginia Marchetti, born in Putney in 1872. She was a daughter of Italian, Julian (Giulio) Marchetti, who had served as an Officer under Garibaldi before settling in England to marry Anne Crossley in Halifax in 1871 and take his place in the carpet manufacturing business.

John and Margherita had two daughters and two sons; Margaret P. 1896, Percival Nathan 1894, Oliver John 1912, and one other daughter.

Political career

Pre-war

John Henry became Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for Halifax in 1900, a seat he held until he resigned in 1928. He served as Junior Lord of the Treasury from 1907 to 1910 in the Liberal Government 1905-1915. He was appointed Privy Counsellor in 1911 and later Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons.

Whitley Councils

During World War I, in 1917, Whitley was appointed to chair a committee to report on 'the Relations of Employers and Employees' in the wake of the establishment of the shop stewards movement and the widespread protest action against dilution.

He proposed a system of regular formal consultative meetings between workers and employers, known to this day as "Whitley Councils". These would be empowered to cover any issue related to pay and conditions of service, and to take matters through to arbitration if necessary. This was a strong model which was to influence industrial relations beyond the UK.

The intention was to establish Whitley councils in the private sector, in particular in those industries most affected by the strike wave - to offset the demand for 'Workers' control' - a demand which was rapidly gaining ground after the Russian revolution.

However, the councils failed to gain ground in coal, cotton, engineering and other heavy industries, but succeeded only in the sphere of government employment where they remain a feature of public sector industrial relations to this day.

Speaker

Whitley was appointed Speaker of the House of Commons in 1921, a post he held until 1928, when he resigned due to ill health. He refused the customary peerage offered by the monarch ? breaking a tradition that had originated in 1789.

Post-Parliament

His political work continued however and he chaired the Royal Commission on Labour in India, which reported in 1931. The report surprised many by concurring with the criticisms of Mahatma Gandhi and others that poverty was the cause of India's social and industrial problems. It was also critical of British employers' role in perpetuating the problems.

Whitley was offered a knighthood for his work on this report, but again, he, like a minority of others, declined.

BBC

His friendship with John Reith led to his appointment as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC in 1930. In 1932, he made the first broadcast on the Empire Service, which developed into the World Service. He held the Chairmanship until he died in 1935, aged 69.

He is buried in Plot 456, Lister Lane Cemetery, Halifax.

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