Difference between revisions of "Peter Mitchell"

From LGBT Archive
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Peter Mitchell candidate.jpg|thumb|Peter Mitchell, from his election address]]'''Peter Mitchell''' (born c. 1949<ref>He was 28 at the time of the by-election</ref>) contested the Cities of London and Westminster South by-election in February 1977, standing as the "Campaign for Homosexual Civil Rights" candidate. [[Griffith Vaughan Williams]] was his election agent. He was placed 5th of out ten candidates in the election, with 2.
+
[[File:Peter Mitchell candidate.jpg|thumb|Peter Mitchell, from his election address]]'''Peter Mitchell''' (born c. 1949<ref>He was 28 at the time of the by-election, according to his election address</ref>) contested the Cities of London and Westminster South by-election in February 1977, standing as the "Campaign for Homosexual Civil Rights" candidate. [[Griffith Vaughan Williams]] was his election agent. He was placed fifth of out ten candidates in the election, with 2.22 per cent of the vote.
  
 
Peter Mitchell was educated at [[Eton College]] and studied classics at Trinity College [[Cambridge]]. Before the election he had worked as a play leader and a parliamentary research assistant.
 
Peter Mitchell was educated at [[Eton College]] and studied classics at Trinity College [[Cambridge]]. Before the election he had worked as a play leader and a parliamentary research assistant.

Revision as of 20:28, 1 April 2014

Peter Mitchell, from his election address
Peter Mitchell (born c. 1949[1]) contested the Cities of London and Westminster South by-election in February 1977, standing as the "Campaign for Homosexual Civil Rights" candidate. Griffith Vaughan Williams was his election agent. He was placed fifth of out ten candidates in the election, with 2.22 per cent of the vote.

Peter Mitchell was educated at Eton College and studied classics at Trinity College Cambridge. Before the election he had worked as a play leader and a parliamentary research assistant.

This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.

References

  1. He was 28 at the time of the by-election, according to his election address