Jestyn Philipps, 2nd Viscount St Davids

Jestyn Reginald Austin Plantagenet Philipps, 2nd Viscount St Davids Bt, (19 February 1917 – 10 June 1991) was a British peer, the only surviving son of John Philipps, 1st Viscount St Davids, and his second wife, Elizabeth Philipps, Viscountess St Davids (née Abney-Hastings).

From his mother, he inherited the baronies of Hungerford, de Moleyns and Strange (de Knockyn).

Early life

St Davids was educated at Eton and Trinity College Cambridge.[1]

Professional life

At the age of 37, St Davids was forced to sell Roch Castle after his company, which provided canal barge pleasure trips on the Regent's Canal, went bankrupt.

While sitting the House of Lords, St Davids accepted the Labour Whip, although he later described himself as a convert to Thatcherism.

While serving in the Lords, St Davids opposed restriction on immigration. He is also notable for being the first person to raise climate change in the houses of parliament, in 1969, over a decade before it was next mentioned:[2]

"My Lords, can my noble friend say whether he and British Railways have taken account of the fact that what were abnormal temperatures last summer may not be abnormal if we continue to discharge carbon dioxide into the air by the burning of various fossil carbons, so increasing the greenhouse effect?"[3]

St Davids founded a pirate club in Camden Town, which was designed to give children a chance to spend time on boats.[1]

Personal life

Lord St Davids married three times but had children only by his first wife. His first marriage was to Doreen Guinness Jowett on 5 May 1938. The couple divorced in 1954.[4] His second marriage was to Elisabeth Joyce Woolf on 15 October 1954, but they divorced in October 1959. By his first wife, St Davids had five children:

References

External links

Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
John Philipps
Viscount St Davids
1938–1991
Succeeded by
Colwyn Philipps
Peerage of England
Preceded by
Elizabeth Philipps
Baron Strange
Baron Hungerford
Baron de Moleyns

1974–1991
Succeeded by
Colwyn Philipps

This page was last updated at 2021-07-13 14:58 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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