Victor Grayson
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(Albert) Victor Grayson (September 5, 1881 – prob. 1920) was an English socialist politician of the early 20th century.
He was born in Liverpool and became an apprentice engineer. Although he had a stammer he became a noted orator. He joined the Independent Labour Party and toured the country giving lectures. In 1907 he stood as an Independent Labour candidate in the Colne Valley by-election, having been nominated by the local branch of the Independent Labour Party. He won a sensational, albeit narrow, victory. Grayson was paid an allowance by the ILP but refused to sign the Labour Party constitution.
Grayson rarely attended Parliament and began to develop a drink problem. After losing his seat in Parliament in 1910, and failing to even retain his deposit when standing for Kennington, he continued his lecture tours but suffered a mental breakdown in 1913.
He alienated many of his left wing colleagues by backing Britain's entry into World War I and turning his oratorical skills to recruiting soldiers. He served briefly in the New Zealand Army and was wounded.
After the war, Grayson attempted to resurrect his political career. He accused David Lloyd George of selling honours, correctly as it later turned out.
In 1918 Sir Basil Thompson, Head of the Special Branch, asked a man called Maundy Gregory to spy on Victor Grayson. Grayson held left-wing views and was suspected of working as an agent for the new communist government in Russia. It was also feared he might be working for the Irish Republican Army.
Grayson discovered that Gregory was spying on him and decided to do some research into the spy's background. With the help of some important friends, Grayson found out that the Prime Minister, David Lloyd George was using Gregory to sell political honours. At a public meeting in Liverpool, Grayson accused Lloyd George of corruption. He claimed that Lloyd George was selling political honours for between £10,000 and £40,000. Grayson declared: "This sale of honours is a national scandal. It can be traced right down to 10 Downing Street, and to a monocled dandy with offices in Whitehall. I know this man, and one day I will name him".
Grayson's comments about the "monocled dandy with offices in Whitehall" let Gregory know that he was in danger of being exposed. At the beginning of September 1920, Grayson was beaten up in the Strand. This was probably an attempt to frighten him, but he continued to make speeches about the selling of honours and threatening to name the man behind this corrupt system.
On 28 September 1920 Grayson was drinking with friends when he received a telephone message. Grayson told his friends that he had to go to the Queen's Hotel in Leicester Square and would be back shortly. Later that night, George Flemwell was painting a picture of the Thames, when he saw Grayson entering a house on the river bank. Flemwell knew Grayson as he had painted his portrait before the war. Flemwell did not realize the significance of this at the time because Grayson was not reported missing until several months later. An investigation carried out in the 1960s revealed that the house that Grayson entered was owned by Maundy Gregory.
Grayson was never seen alive again. It is believed that he was murdered, but his body was never found. It was speculated that Grayson had been murdered to prevent his revealing evidence of corruption, although the most comprehensive biography (by David G. Clark) points to his possible survival to the 1950s. Some of Grayson's most fanatical supporters insist that he was the only true socialist ever to sit in Parliament.
Further reading
- David Clark, Victor Grayson: Labour's Lost Leader (Quartet Books, London, 1985) ISBN 070432539X
External links
- Glass Hero - a play by Jim Grover about Grayson's disappearance.
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| title = Member of Parliament for Colne Valley | years = 1907–1910 | before = Sir James Kitson, Bt. | after = Charles Leach