Thomas McKerrell

Thomas McKerrell (1877 21 December 1922) was a Scottish trade unionist and politician.

Born in Scotland, McKerrell moved to South Africa to work as a coal miner with his brother David, although he left around the onset of the Second Boer War.[1] He returned to Scotland, settling in Kilmarnock, where he married in 1899,[2] and joined the Independent Labour Party (ILP) around this time. He was elected as a councillor in Kilmarnock, and also became a bailie there.[3] He was appointed as agent of the Ayrshire Miners' Union, and through this served on the executive of both the Scottish Miners' Federation and the Miners' Federation of Great Britain;[4] and as vice-chairman of the Scottish Trades Union Congress.[5]

The ILP was affiliated to the Labour Party, and McKerrell was selected to stand for Labour in Midlothian at the January 1910 UK general election. However, he withdrew from the contest at short notice.[6] In November 1910, he was adopted as a last-minute candidate for Liverpool Kirkdale at the December general election,[7] taking 41.6% of the vote, a small reduction for the party's performance earlier in the year.[8]

McKerrell next stood in the Kilmarnock Burghs by-election, 1911 where, as a supporter of women's suffrage, he received significant support from the local branches of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies.[9] Despite this, he could take only third place, with 17.3% of the votes cast.[8]

McKerrell's brother, David, had returned to mine in South Africa, and became a leader of a strike in the early 1910s. As a result, he was deported back to Scotland, where he stayed with Tom and briefly became a prominent speaker, but died soon after.[10]

McKerrell was a supporter of British involvement in World War I, although he opposed conscription,[11] and in 1917 he resigned his union posts to become an official in the Ministry of Labour. This required him to move to London, while his wife remained in Kilmarnock; the two drifted apart, and in 1921, McKerrell asked for a separation. He appeared to regret this decision, and was lined up for a move to the Ministry's Scottish office, but his wife would not take him back.[2]

In December 1922, McKerrell committed suicide by jumping in front of an underground train at Charing Cross. The inquest concluded that, in addition to his marital problems, he had been suffering from delusions that there was a conspiracy against him.[2]

References

  1. Julian Roup, A Fisherman in the Saddle, p.203
  2. 1 2 3 "Suicide of a civil servant", The Observer, 24 December 1922
  3. Alan Campbell, The Scottish Miners, 1874-1939: Trade unions and politics, p.101
  4. "Speeches On The Crisis." The Times, 4 March 1912, p.7
  5. Angela Tuckett, The Scottish Trades Union Congress: the first 80 years, 1897-1977, p.132
  6. London School of Economics, "Independent Labour Party: ILP/7/11/4"
  7. Philip J. Waller, Democracy and Sectarianism: A Political and Social History of Liverpool 1868-1939, p.248
  8. 1 2 Craig, F. W. S. (1983) [1989]. British parliamentary election results 1885–1918 (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 142. ISBN 0-900178-27-2.
  9. Sandra Stanley Holton, Feminism and Democracy, pp.67-68
  10. Julian Roup, A Fisherman in the Saddle, pp.229-257
  11. "Trade unions and compulsion", The Times, 1 May 1916, p.5
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