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Dingle Foot
Dingle Foot
from Wikipedia

Sir Dingle Mackintosh Foot, QC (24 August 1905 – 18 June 1978) was a British lawyer, Liberal and Labour Member of Parliament, and Solicitor General for England and Wales in the first government of Harold Wilson.

Key Information

Family and education

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Born in Plymouth, Devon, Foot was the eldest son of Isaac Foot, who was a solicitor and founder of the Plymouth law firm, Foot and Bowden. Isaac Foot was an active member of the Liberal Party and was Liberal Member of Parliament for Bodmin in Cornwall between 1922 and 1924 and again from 1929 to 1935, and also a Lord Mayor of Plymouth.

Dingle Foot was educated at Bembridge School, a boys' independent school on the Isle of Wight, and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he was President of the Oxford Union in 1928. He had four brothers: Michael, a prominent figure in the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition from 1980 to 1983; John (Lord Foot), a Liberal politician; Hugh (Lord Caradon), Governor of Cyprus and British Ambassador to the United Nations and Christopher, a solicitor who joined the family firm. He also had two sisters. His nephew, Hugh's son, was the campaigning journalist Paul Foot.

He married Dorothy Mary Elliston, who died in 1989. They had no children.[1]

Law career

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Foot was admitted to Gray's Inn on 19 November 1925 and called to the bar on 2 July 1930. He became a Master Bencher in 1952 and was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1954[1] He had been in active practice after having qualified a Barrister of England both in England and in several Commonwealth countries.[2] He was called to the Bar or admitted as a solicitor or practitioner in Ghana (1948), Sri Lanka (1951), Northern Rhodesia (1956), Sierra Leone (1959), Supreme Court of India (as a Senior Advocate) (1960), Bahrain (1962) and Malaysia (1964). He also appeared regularly in the Courts of Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyika, Nyasaland and Pakistan. In addition, he had been regularly engaged in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council since 1945.[3][non-primary source needed]

Politics

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From 1931 to 1945 Foot was Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for Dundee. He was Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Economic Warfare in Winston Churchill's wartime coalition, and a member of the British delegation to San Francisco Conference in 1945. He visited Washington in June 1944, and secured an agreement with the US State Department, the new War Refugee Board and the Foreign Economic Administration to supply 550 tons of aid parcels a month over a three-month period to 'unassimilated civilian internees' in war-zones in Europe.[4] At the 1945 election he lost his seat to Labour.

At the 1950 general election Foot defended the formerly Liberal seat of North Cornwall, following the defection of its member Tom Horabin to Labour in 1947, but he again lost, to the Conservative Harold Roper. He stood for the seat in 1951, losing again but by a narrower margin.[5] Foot left the Liberals and joined the Labour Party in 1956. He was Labour MP for Ipswich from a 1957 by-election until 1970. Following his appointment as Solicitor General in the first government of Harold Wilson, he was knighted and made a Privy Counsellor in 1964. He served in this post for almost 3 years, from 18 October 1964 until 24 August 1967, until he was replaced by Arthur Irvine following a major government reshuffle. In 1970 he was again defeated, this time by the Conservative candidate.

Other work

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In the late 1940s and early 1950s Foot was often seen on BBC television as the moderator of the current affairs programme In the News. Often appearing with him were Michael Foot and Sir Bob Boothby. His publications included Despotism in Disguise (1937) and British Political Crises (1976).

Death

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Foot died on 18 June 1978 in a hotel in Hong Kong, after choking on a sandwich.[2][5]

Arms

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Coat of arms of Dingle Foot
Notes
Displayed in a painting at Gray's Inn.[6]
Crest
On a tower Sable between two lions’ gambs Gules a chough Proper.
Escutcheon
Or on a chevron engrailed Sable between three lions’ gambs Gules three wheels Or.
Motto
Pro Lege Et Libertate

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sir Dingle Mackintosh Foot (24 August 1905 – 18 June 1978) was a British and , notable for serving as a under both the Liberal and Labour parties, and for his role as for from 1964 to 1965. Born in Plymouth to , a Liberal MP, and Eva Mackintosh, he was the eldest of seven siblings, including future Labour leader . Educated at and Forres School, Foot studied law at , where he served as President of the in 1928, before being called to the bar at in 1930. He entered politics as the Liberal MP for from 1931 to 1945, during which time he contributed to wartime efforts, initially in the Royal Observer Corps and later as at the Ministry of Economic Warfare in Winston Churchill's coalition government. Disillusioned with the Liberals' decline, Foot defected to the Labour Party in 1956 and won the seat in a 1957 , holding it until 1970. Under Harold Wilson's administration, he was appointed , earning a knighthood and Privy Counsellorship in 1964; he chaired the Society of Labour Lawyers from 1960 to 1964 prior to this. Beyond , Foot built a distinguished international legal practice, representing figures such as in Kenya's independence struggles. Foot died suddenly in on 18 June 1978 at age 72, choking on a sandwich while preparing for a legal case, his remains cremated there. His career exemplified a commitment to and , bridging party lines in pursuit of progressive causes, though his party switch drew some contemporary criticism within Liberal circles.

Early Life and Family

Plymouth Roots and Family Dynamics

Dingle Mackintosh Foot was born on 24 August 1905 in Plymouth, , as the eldest child of , a solicitor who founded the local law firm Foot and Bowden, and his wife Eva Mackintosh, whom Isaac married on 22 September 1904 in , . The couple had seven children in total: five sons and two daughters, with Dingle's siblings including Hugh (later Baron Caradon), John (later Baron Foot), Michael (a prominent Labour politician), and Christopher, who joined the family law practice. The Foot family's roots in Plymouth traced back to Isaac's father, also named Isaac Foot (1842–1927), a carpenter, undertaker, and Wesleyan born in Horrabridge, , who settled in the city and raised his family there, including Isaac junior, born on 23 February 1880 as the fifth of their children. senior's trade provided stability in Plymouth's working-class environment, enabling his son to attend the Hoe Grammar School before qualifying as a solicitor and entering Liberal politics as an MP for (1922–1924 and 1929–1935) and Secretary for Mines (1931–1932). Family dynamics revolved around Isaac's fervent Liberalism, Methodist faith, and intellectual pursuits, including a deep admiration for Oliver Cromwell—evidenced by at least twenty busts of the figure in the home—which fostered an environment of debate, oratory, and public service that profoundly shaped his children. Four of the sons pursued political careers, inheriting their father's rhetorical skills, as seen in Dingle, Michael, and John successively presiding over the ; this pattern dominated Plymouth's political landscape for generations, with the family's home serving as a hub for Liberal and evangelical .

Education at Plymouth College and Oxford

Dingle Foot attended on of Wight for his . He matriculated at , in the mid-1920s, where he studied Modern History and graduated with a second-class . At , Foot demonstrated early political promise by serving as President of the Oxford University Liberal Club in 1927 and, more prominently, as President of the in 1928, a position that involved leading debates and fostering his rhetorical abilities.

Bar Admission and Early Practice

Dingle Foot was called to the bar by in 1930, shortly after completing his studies at . In 1931, he joined the chambers of Geoffrey Hutchinson KC at the bar in , marking the start of his professional practice as a . Foot's early years at the bar coincided with his rapid entry into politics, as he was elected Liberal MP for Dundee in the October 1931 general election, which limited the extent of his initial courtroom experience to routine common law matters before parliamentary duties predominated.

Notable Cases and Queen's Counsel Appointment

Foot's legal practice focused on constitutional and human rights matters, particularly in Commonwealth jurisdictions, where he defended political leaders against colonial or post-colonial authorities. In Kenya, he represented Jomo Kenyatta during trials related to the Mau Mau uprising, advocating against charges of managing an illegal society. Similarly, in Nyasaland (modern Malawi), he acted as counsel for Hastings Banda, challenging detention under emergency regulations amid independence struggles. In , Foot contested the validity of the Emergency Powers Act in 1962 on behalf of Alhaji D. S. Adegbenro, arguing unlawful ouster of a regional ; the case prompted Adegbenro's expulsion but highlighted executive overreach. He later sought to defend Chief on charges in 1963 but was denied entry by Nigerian authorities, underscoring tensions over foreign counsel in political trials. In , Foot appeared in the 1968 Court of Appeal case Akainyah and Another v. The Republic, representing appellants in a criminal matter involving procedural rights. Domestically, Foot handled appeals such as that for Leonard Woodley and associates in the 1950s, securing acquittals after initial convictions in a labor dispute-related case. Later, in , he defended Bernadette Devlin (later McAliskey) amid civil rights activism prosecutions in the late 1960s. These engagements established Foot's reputation for rigorous defense of against state power. Foot was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1954, a distinction reflecting his seniority and success at the English bar after 24 years in practice; he had become a Master Bencher of two years prior in 1952. The silk status elevated his role in higher courts, aligning with his growing international profile, though he continued active advocacy until his death in 1978 during a case in .

Political Trajectory

Liberal Party Entry and Dundee MP Tenure (1931–1945)

Dingle Foot, son of the prominent Liberal activist , aligned with the Liberal Party in his early adulthood, influenced by his family's longstanding commitment to Liberal principles. He first sought parliamentary office as the Liberal candidate for Tiverton in the 1929 , but was defeated by the Conservative incumbent. Foot entered in the 1931 on 27 October, winning one of Dundee's two seats as a National Liberal candidate supporting the National Government . Dundee's multi-member constituency facilitated Liberal-Conservative pacts against Labour, enabling his victory with 52,048 votes alongside Conservative Florence Horsbrugh's 48,566, while Labour polled 32,573. He was re-elected for in the 1935 , maintaining the Liberal hold amid the party's fragmented national performance under the National Government. Throughout his tenure from 1931 to 1945, Foot identified with the Samuelite wing of the Liberal Party, favoring Herbert Samuel's moderate approach and resisting subsequent internal shifts toward the right under leaders like . He emphasized in parliamentary contributions, critiquing administrative overreach by both Conservative and Labour elements, though specific interventions remained limited by the party's marginal status and the dominance of coalition dynamics in . His seat ended with defeat in the 1945 general election, reflecting the Liberal Party's sharp decline to just 12 seats nationwide as voters shifted toward Labour's social reforms and Conservative reconstruction pledges.

Wartime Role in Economic Warfare

Dingle Foot was appointed to the Ministry of on 17 May 1940, as part of Winston Churchill's wartime , and retained the position until 23 May 1945. The Ministry, established in September 1939, coordinated Britain's economic offensive against the by enforcing a comprehensive , controlling , issuing statutory lists of blacklisted firms, and disrupting enemy supply chains via measures such as the navicert system for neutral shipping. In this junior ministerial role, Foot managed parliamentary business for the Ministry, responding to queries on staffing, operational scale, and enforcement; for instance, on 28 January 1942, he addressed reductions in departmental staff amid expanding duties. He focused on routine administration of policies, including oversight of land and sea measures to intercept enemy imports, which by 1943 encompassed not only shipping seizures but also preclusive purchasing and to deter neutral collaboration with . Foot's efforts contributed to tightening restrictions on Axis access to resources like and ball bearings, though the 's effectiveness was hampered by threats and neutral smuggling routes until Allied advances in 1944-1945. Foot undertook key diplomatic missions to advance economic warfare objectives, including visits to Washington for Anglo-American coordination on blacklist harmonization and resource denial, and to to negotiate curbs on Axis trade through neutral territories. In Switzerland-focused talks, he represented British interests in pressuring the Swiss government to limit exports of precision machinery and financial flows to , aligning with broader Ministry strategies to exploit economic vulnerabilities without direct military engagement. These initiatives supported the Ministry's preclusive operations, which by mid-1942 had expanded to include covert purchasing of strategic materials to starve Axis industries.

Post-War Interlude and Labour Switch (1957–1970)

Following his defeat in at the 1945 , where Labour captured the seat, Foot remained active in Liberal politics, serving as vice-president of the party from 1946. He also participated in the British delegation to the conference that drafted the Charter in 1945. Foot contested North Cornwall as the Liberal candidate in the 1950 , securing a narrow second place behind the Conservatives with 18,671 votes to their 19,510. In the 1951 , he again stood for North Cornwall but finished a distant second, reflecting the Liberals' diminished national standing. By 1954, Foot declined re-nomination as Liberal vice-president, citing disagreements with the party's direction under leader , which he perceived as shifting rightward. Amid the Liberals' electoral marginalization, Foot defected to the Labour Party in 1956, motivated by disillusionment with the Liberals' ideological drift and a pragmatic aim to sustain his parliamentary prospects; this move aligned him with figures like Lady , who also crossed over, though he failed to persuade his brother John to follow. Foot capitalized on his switch by winning the Ipswich by-election on 24 October 1957 as the Labour candidate, defeating the Conservatives by 1,458 votes in a seat vacated by the death of Liberal-turned-Conservative Tom Garnett. He retained Ipswich in subsequent general elections: 1959 (majority 4,666), 1964 (majority 6,495), and 1966 (majority 7,726). His tenure ended with a narrow defeat in the 1970 general election, losing by just 13 votes to Conservative pupil John Allen Pauls amid a national swing to the Conservatives. During this period, Foot focused on legal and human rights advocacy, including counsel appearances in colonial territories such as Basutoland, Kenya, Ghana, and Nigeria, while building his reputation as a barrister.

Government Positions under Wilson

Upon Harold Wilson's formation of his first Labour government following the 15 October 1964 general election, Dingle Foot was appointed for on 18 October 1964, deputising for Sir Elwyn Jones in providing legal advice to the administration and representing the Crown in court proceedings. The position required Foot, as a Queen's Counsel, to accept a knighthood, which he did reluctantly, reflecting his longstanding republican sentiments inherited from his family's Nonconformist Liberal traditions. In this role, Foot contributed to government efforts on domestic legal reforms, including reiterating commitments to legislation prohibiting in public places and to such acts amid rising debates over and integration in 1965. He also participated in parliamentary scrutiny of bills related to access and industrial injuries, defending government positions on procedural and evidentiary matters. Foot's tenure ended with his resignation on 24 August 1967, shortly after his appointment to the earlier that year, primarily in protest against the government's restrained policy toward under in 1965. He argued publicly that Britain should not rule out military intervention to uphold constitutional order and bring the Rhodesian regime to justice, viewing the Wilson administration's reluctance to use force as a failure to confront what he termed a "gang of criminals" in . Foot returned to private legal practice thereafter, succeeded by Arthur Irvine QC. No further ministerial positions were held by Foot under Wilson, who formed a second government in 1974 after Foot had lost his parliamentary seat in 1970.

Key Positions and Debates

Stance Against European Economic Community Membership

Dingle Foot opposed British membership of the , a position that contrasted with his broader internationalist outlook informed by his legal practice in international tribunals. This opposition manifested in his votes against proposals advanced by Labour governments during the , aligning with intra-party skepticism over the implications for national , , and Commonwealth ties. In a House of Commons debate on 7 November 1962, however, Foot had expressed support for entry, prioritizing political imperatives over purely economic calculations. He contended that Britain could wield greater influence in by integrating into a larger European framework, thereby avoiding isolation and enhancing collective defenses against , while urging acceptance of membership terms that preserved strong partnerships without diluting EEC cohesion. He dismissed isolationist objections from both political flanks, advocated shifting resources from stagnant industries to innovative ones to capitalize on EEC markets, and downplayed unity as a viable counterweight, noting its fragmentation and lack of coordinated policy or military-economic backing akin to contributions (e.g., 2 million Indian and 500,000 African troops). Foot's later resistance likely reflected evolving concerns over the supranational elements of EEC integration, as articulated in Labour circles, including potential constraints on domestic socialist policies and preferential trade arrangements that disadvantaged developing nations. His stance contributed to the party's internal divisions, evident in debates surrounding Harold Wilson's 1967 application, which sought renegotiated terms but faced veto by French President . As (1964–1965), Foot served in a government pursuing exploratory talks, yet his personal opposition underscored tensions between ministerial duties and principled reservations about irreversible commitments to federalist structures.

Interventions in Major Parliamentary Debates

Dingle Foot intervened in the on 7 May 1940, questioning the adequacy of equipment for British forces deployed against German advances in . Specifically, he asked the Secretary of State for War whether troops in the North-Western Expeditionary Force had been supplied with dark glasses to prevent snow blindness, underscoring logistical shortcomings in the operation that ultimately failed to secure key Norwegian ports. This exchange reflected broader Liberal criticism of the Chamberlain government's military preparedness during the early stages of . In the Debate on the Address on 9 November 1936, Foot critiqued the National Government's economic policies, arguing that the Minister of Labour's remarks exemplified complacency amid rising , and urged bolder measures for industrial recovery. His contribution highlighted persistent interwar challenges, including the abandonment of principles he had long championed as a Liberal. Upon his return to Parliament as Labour MP for Ipswich, Foot addressed the Debate on the Address on 6 November 1957, reflecting on his 12-year absence and critiquing Conservative foreign policy, particularly the Suez intervention, while advocating for multilateral disarmament and colonial reform. These interventions demonstrated his shift toward Labour internationalism, emphasizing legal accountability in global affairs.

Party Switching and Political Pragmatism

Dingle Foot's transition from the Liberal Party to the Labour Party occurred in July 1956, following multiple electoral defeats as a Liberal candidate after . Having lost his seat in 1945 and failed in subsequent Liberal contests, Foot sought a more electorally viable platform amid the Liberal Party's diminished national standing, which had dwindled to just a handful of seats by the mid-1950s. This move enabled his return to via a victory in on October 24, 1957, as the Labour candidate, marking him as one of the few politicians to serve in the for both major parties. The switch reflected pragmatic adaptation to political realities rather than a profound ideological conversion to . Foot, a committed civil libertarian aligned with the Samuelite wing of during , retained a core affinity for liberal principles throughout his , prioritizing administrative expediency and individual freedoms over rigid party dogma. Observers noted that his heart remained with ; as journalist remarked, Foot never fully embraced Labour's socialist tenets, viewing the change as a strategic necessity in an era when the Liberals lacked organizational strength and electoral appeal. His subsequent roles in Harold Wilson's Labour governments, including Solicitor-General from 1964 to 1967, demonstrated this flexibility, allowing him to advance legal and diplomatic priorities without compromising his underlying commitments to and . Foot's pragmatism extended to his parliamentary conduct, where he occasionally critiqued Labour orthodoxy while leveraging his position for cross-party influence. For instance, his opposition to unchecked executive power echoed Liberal traditions, even as he supported Labour's legislative agenda on pragmatic grounds of . This approach contrasted with more doctrinaire contemporaries, underscoring a career defined by adaptability to shifting power dynamics rather than unwavering partisanship.

Later Activities and Legacy

Non-Political Contributions

Foot pursued a parallel career as a , independent of his parliamentary roles, with significant achievements in private legal practice. Admitted to the bar at in 1930, he advanced to Queen's Counsel in 1952 and was elected a bencher of the Inn that year, later serving as treasurer. His practice emphasized and , often involving complex defenses in high-stakes trials. Much of Foot's distinguished legal work occurred during periods away from politics, including defenses of African leaders amid . He represented , the Kenyan independence figure, and provided counsel in , , and for cases against colonial authorities. In 1959, he acted as junior counsel to Dr. , future Malawian president, before the Devlin Commission inquiring into the emergency, challenging emergency detentions and state evidence. These engagements highlighted his role in advocating procedural fairness in politically charged but legally framed proceedings. Post-government, after resigning as in 1967, Foot resumed full-time barristerial practice, focusing on international litigation. In June 1978, he was en route to represent clients in a Rhodesian case when he died, underscoring his ongoing commitment to cross-jurisdictional legal advocacy. Foot contributed to legal with publications on forensic and evidentiary matters, notably Ritual Murder (1959), which analyzed ritual killing cases through medico-legal lenses, drawing on trial evidence to critique investigative methods and cultural-legal intersections. This work reflected his expertise in unusual criminal proceedings, distinct from partisan commentary.

Death and Family Influence

Sir Dingle Foot died on 18 June 1978 at the age of 72 in a hotel room in , where he was handling a legal case. He choked on a bone from a , leading to his collapse; his remains were cremated locally. Foot hailed from the politically prominent Foot family of Plymouth, whose influence stemmed from his father, Isaac Foot, a devout Liberal activist, Methodist lay preacher, and businessman who served as Lord Mayor of Plymouth and contested parliamentary seats multiple times. Isaac instilled in his sons a commitment to Liberal principles, including free trade, social reform, and anti-imperialism, fostering a household environment of vigorous debate and public service; four of his five sons pursued careers in law or politics. Dingle's brothers included Michael Foot, who became Labour Party leader from 1980 to 1983 after a parliamentary career marked by left-wing advocacy; Hugh Foot (later Lord Caradon), a colonial administrator who served as Governor of Cyprus and Jamaica and as Britain's first Permanent Representative to the United Nations; and John Foot (later Lord Foot), a barrister and Liberal peer who chaired organizations like the Bow Group. This familial legacy shaped Dingle's early Liberal affiliation and oratorical skills—he, like his brothers Michael and John, presided over the —but also highlighted tensions, as Dingle and Michael defected to Labour in the 1950s amid disillusionment with Liberal electoral irrelevance, diverging from the family's core while retaining its emphasis on internationalism and . The Foot brothers' collective prominence amplified Dingle's visibility in legal and political circles, with shared networks aiding his transitions, such as his wartime roles and post-parliamentary barristry defending figures like . Despite party switches, the family's dynastic Liberal roots endured in public perception, underscoring a pattern of ideological evolution within a framework of principled dissent.

References

  1. https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q334651
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