Peter Kerr-Smiley

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Peter Kerr-Smiley
File:Peter Kerr-Smiley (cropped).jpg
Kerr-Smiley in 1910
Member of Parliament
for North Antrim
In office
1910–1922
Preceded byRobert Glendinning
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
BornPeter Kerr Smiley
(1879-02-22)22 February 1879
Died23 June 1943(1943-06-23) (aged 64)
PartyUnionist
SpouseMaud Simpson
Children2
Parent
EducationEton College
Alma materTrinity Hall, Cambridge
Military service
RankMajor
Unit21st Lancers
Royal Irish Rifles
Battles/warsSecond Boer War

Peter Kerr Kerr-Smiley (22 February 1879 – 23 June 1943) was a Northern Irish Member of Parliament.

Family background and early life

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He was born at Larne as Peter Kerr Smiley, the second son of Sir Hugh Smiley, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Eton College and Trinity Hall, Cambridge.[1] He commissioned a second lieutenant in the 21st Lancers on 5 May 1900,[2] promoted to lieutenant on 15 December 1900,[3] and from 1901 to 1902 served on the staff during the Second Boer War in South Africa. After the end of hostilities in May 1902, he left Cape Town the following month.[4] He resigned his commission in 1905,[5] but later reached the rank of Major in the 14th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles.

Brother-in-law to Ernest Simpson

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In 1905 he adopted the surname of Kerr-Smiley, and the same year married Maud Simpson, daughter of Ernest L. Simpson, a British shipbroker, and sister of Ernest Aldrich Simpson, a significant figure in the 1936 Abdication Crisis. They had two children:

  • Cyril Hugh Kerr-Smiley (1906–1980; married Agnes Sorell-Cameron)
  • Elizabeth Maud Kerr-Smiley (1907–2006; married architectural historian Christopher Hussey)

Political career

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Kerr-Smiley was a Unionist in politics, and Chairman of the Belfast newspaper The Northern Whig. He unsuccessfully stood for South Down at the 1906 general election.

Member of Parliament for North Antrim

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He was elected for North Antrim in January 1910 and represented the constituency until 1922, in its 1950 recreation a constituency much later achieving significant prominence for decades by its MP the Rev. Dr. Ian Paisley.

Kerr-Smiley's London house was at 31 Belgrave Square, and he was a member of the Carlton Club, the Marlborough Club and the Cavalry Club.

References

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  • Michael Stenton and Stephen Lees (eds), Who's Who of British Members of Parliament Volume III 1919–1945, Brighton 1979, p. 196-197
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