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Sir Edwin Evans (1855 – 4 April 1928) was a British politician and estate agent.[1]
Background
editEdwin Evans was born in Kentish Town, north London, England.[citation needed] Later he moved to the expanding suburbs of south London, where he established his auctioneering business, eventually settling in Battersea.[1]
Career
editEvans became active in the Conservative Party and in 1910 was selected by the Municipal Reform Party to contest elections to the London County Council. He was not elected on that occasion, and declined the offer of standing as a member of parliament. Instead, he became involved in extra-parliamentary activities opposing the budgetary policies of the Liberal government, in particular the introduction of Capital Gains Tax. He was a founder member of the Land Union, and President of the Protection of Property Association (POPA). In 1910, he was appointed to the board of the Stepney and Suburban Building Society.
In 1913, Evans was elected to the county council as a Municipal Reform Party councillor, representing Wandsworth in south London. During the First World War he was a member of the council's Parks, Smallholdings and Allotments Standing Committee, which oversaw the use of public spaces for the production of food. In 1919, he was re-elected to the county council as a councillor for Battersea South, holding the seat until 1925.[2]
Knighthood
editIn 1927 on the King's birthday, Evans was knighted for “political and public services in Battersea”.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b Brown, Don (4 January 2014). "Edwin Evan and Battersea Rise". Stuff About London. UK. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
- ^ Bello-Taylor, Maya (23 January 2023). "John Richard Archer - the first Black mayor of a London borough John Richard Archer - the first Black mayor of a London borough". IBHM-UK. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
- ^ "Whitehall 28 June 1927" (PDF). The Gazette. Retrieved 17 May 2016.