Born in Wales, he started work in a factory aged ten, but studied in his spare time and won a scholarship to University College Nottingham. He was ordained as a Baptist minister in Warrington and Liverpool, and became president of the Liverpool Free Church Council.[2]
Dunnico also holds the distinction of being the Labour Party's first backbench rebel, when on 21 February 1924 he became the first Labour MP ever to vote against a Labour government. The vote was on the First Labour Government's programme of building light cruisers, to which Dunnico (a former secretary of the Peace Society[5][6]) objected because he feared the start of an arms race, and because believed that the Parliamentary Labour Party had not been properly consulted.[7][8]
Dunnico was involved in founding the New Welcome Lodge No. 5139, which was consecrated in 1929, shortly before the formation in 1929 of the second Labour Government. It was created at the suggestion of the then Prince of Wales, afterwards King Edward VIII, who was concerned by the antagonism between Freemasonry and the British left towards Freemasonry.
The New Welcome Lodge was intended to form a link between Freemasonry and the new governing party, and was open to Labour MPs and for employees of trade unions and the Labour party; its members included Labour's deputy leader Arthur Greenwood. However, when the Parliamentary Labour Party was reduced in strength after its split at the 1929 general election over Ramsay MacDonald's formation of the National Government, numbers were reduced.
In 1934, membership was opened to all men working in the Palace of Westminster. Dunnico was Master of the New Welcome Lodge in 1931.[10]
^ abcCraig, F. W. S. (1983) [1969]. British parliamentary election results 1918-1949 (3rd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. ISBN0-900178-06-X.
^"Labour Leader And National Unity", The Times, 28 January 1935, p. 14.
^"The Mason's candidate New Welcome Lodge No.5139 and the Parliamentary Labour Party" by John Hammill and Andrew Prescott (2006) in Labour History Review, Vol. 71, No. 1, April 2006.