Difference between revisions of "Humphry Berkeley"

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He was educated at [[Malvern|Malvern College]] and Pembroke College, [[Cambridge]]. While at Cambridge he wrote a number of letters to public figure pretending to be "H Rochester Sneath", headmaster of the non-existent Selhurst School in Sussex. The hoax was discovered, causing him to be excluded from the university for two years. The letters were published in 1974 under the title ''The Life and Death of Rochester Sneath''.
 
He was educated at [[Malvern|Malvern College]] and Pembroke College, [[Cambridge]]. While at Cambridge he wrote a number of letters to public figure pretending to be "H Rochester Sneath", headmaster of the non-existent Selhurst School in Sussex. The hoax was discovered, causing him to be excluded from the university for two years. The letters were published in 1974 under the title ''The Life and Death of Rochester Sneath''.
  
In 1959 Berkeley was elected Conservative MP for [[Lancaster]]. In 1965 he introduced a bill to legalise homosexual relations between men, along the lines recommended in the {Wolfenden Report]]. The bill passed its second reading in 1966 by 164 votes to 117, but was lost when parliament was dissolved. Berkeley lost his seat at the ensuing general election, and ascribed his defeat to the unpopularity of the bill.
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In 1959 Berkeley was elected Conservative MP for [[Lancaster]]. In 1965 he introduced a bill to legalise homosexual relations between men, along the lines recommended in the [[Wolfenden Report]]. The bill passed its second reading in 1966 by 164 votes to 117, but was lost when parliament was dissolved. Berkeley lost his seat at the ensuing general election, and ascribed his defeat to the unpopularity of the bill.
  
 
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Revision as of 23:30, 1 November 2014

Humphry Berkeley (1926–1994) was a Conservative (later Labour and SDP) politician, who proposed a bill to legalise male homosexuality in 1966.

He was educated at Malvern College and Pembroke College, Cambridge. While at Cambridge he wrote a number of letters to public figure pretending to be "H Rochester Sneath", headmaster of the non-existent Selhurst School in Sussex. The hoax was discovered, causing him to be excluded from the university for two years. The letters were published in 1974 under the title The Life and Death of Rochester Sneath.

In 1959 Berkeley was elected Conservative MP for Lancaster. In 1965 he introduced a bill to legalise homosexual relations between men, along the lines recommended in the Wolfenden Report. The bill passed its second reading in 1966 by 164 votes to 117, but was lost when parliament was dissolved. Berkeley lost his seat at the ensuing general election, and ascribed his defeat to the unpopularity of the bill.

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