British politician
Sir John Talbot Dillwyn-Llewelyn, 1st Baronet (26 May 1836 – 6 July 1927) was a British Conservative Member of Parliament who was notable for his links to Welsh sports.
Background and education
Llewelyn was the son of photographer and scientist John Dillwyn Llewelyn and Emma Thomasina Talbot, youngest daughter of Thomas Mansel Talbot and Lady Mary (née Fox Strangways) of Penrice, south Wales and a cousin of William Henry Fox Talbot. He was educated at Eton and later Christ Church, Oxford.[citation needed]
Political career
Llewelyn was High Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1878 and Mayor of Swansea in 1891.[citation needed]
In March 1888, Llewelyn contested the Gower by-election as a Conservative candidate. The Liberal ranks had been affected by divisions over the choice of candidate and Llewelyn ran a strong campaign. Unusually for a Conservative candidate he held meetings in nonconformist chapels, including one at Zoar, Ystalyfera which was said to have been well attended by the working men of the district.[1] Llewelyn polled well although narrowly defeated by David Randell.[citation needed]
In 1889 he was elected as one of the first members of Glamorgan County Council and was immediately made an alderman, to which role he was re-elected in 1895. He was created a baronet, 'of Penllergaer in Llangyfelach and of Ynys-y-gerwn in Cadoxton juxta Neath both in the County of Glamorgan', on 20 March 1890.[2]
In 1892, following the death of his uncle, Lewis Llewelyn Dillwyn, Llewelyn was adopted as Conservative candidate for the Swansea Town constituency but was defeated by R.D. Burnie. However he reversed the result three years later when he was elected Conservative MP for Swansea in the 1895 general election, but lost the seat in 1900.[citation needed]
Llewelyn's connections to sport included the position of captain of the South Wales Cricket Club and in 1885 he replaced the Earl of Jersey as the president of the Welsh Rugby Union; a post he would hold until 1906, when he was replaced by Horace Lyne. Lyne himself stated that 'they (WRU) had been singularly fortunate in getting a gentleman like Mr J.T.D. Llewelyn to act in that captaincy'.[3]
Family
Llewelyn married in 1861 Caroline Julia, daughter of Sir Michael Hicks Beach, 8th Baronet. Their younger and only surviving son Charles married the heiress of the Venables family and adopted the additional surname Venables. He became MP for Radnorshire and High Sheriff of that county. His eldest son, the cricketer Willie Llewelyn, committed suicide in August 1893.[citation needed]
Later life and death
Llewelyn died in 1927 aged 91 and was buried with his wife and next to his father in St David's Church in Penllergaer.[citation needed]
Arms
Coat of arms of Sir John Dillwyn-Llewelyn
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- Crest
- "Upon the trunk of a tree, fesswise eradicated and sprouting, a lamb passant Proper supporting a staff Or, therefrom flowing a banner Gules charged with three chevronels Argent" (Llewelyn); 2: "In front of a stag's head couped Proper three trefoils slipped Proper" (Dillwyn).
- Escutcheon
- "Quarterly 1 & 4: Argent, gutte de poise, three chevronels Gules, in base a lamb passant Proper" (Llewelyn); 2 & 3: "Gules, on a chevron nebuly Argent five trefoils slipped of the First" (Dillwyn); "At the centre point a baronet's badge."
- Motto
- Craignez Honte (Dread shame)[4]
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Legacy
Dillwyn Llewelyn Community School in Cockett, Swansea, was named for him – this was amalgamated with Dynevor School in 2001 to become Dylan Thomas Community School[citation needed]
See also
Bibliography
- Smith, David; Williams, Gareth (1980). Fields of Praise: The Official History of The Welsh Rugby Union. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 0-7083-0766-3.
References
External links