He was a member of Manchester City Council for thirty years, and also president of the Manchester and Salford Trades Council and of the Withington Divisional Parliamentary Labour Party.[1]
He retained the Westhoughton seat through successive elections until he retired from the House of Commons early in 1951 due to ill health.[2] At the time he was the longest-serving Labour MP.
Davies was a strong supporter of the temperance and pacifist movements, whose causes he advocated in Parliament and in the country. He was also a committed parliamentarian, and served as joint secretary of the British group of the Inter-Parliamentary Union.[1]
He married Margaret Griffiths in 1902, and they had three sons. Davies died at his home in Porthcawl, Glamorgan, in 1954, aged 77.[1]
References
^ abcd'Obituary: Mr R J Davies', The Times, 2 November 1954.
^'MP not to seek re-election', The Times, 10 April 1951, p. 7.