Douglas Vickers
| Douglas Vickers | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Born | 1861 | ||||||
| Died | 1937 | ||||||
| Residence | Chapel House, Charles Street, Mayfair, W | ||||||
| Occupation |
business political | ||||||
| |||||||
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
1911.06.30 proposed by C. Eliot, seconded by C.J. Patten
1912.03.05 nominated
death noted in Report of the Council 1937-1938
Notes From Elsewhere
Douglas Vickers (1861 – 1937) was an English industrialist and politician. He was the son of Colonel Thomas Edward Vickers (1833–1915), owner and Director of the famous Sheffield firm Vickers, Sons & Co. Ltd., and Frances Mary Vickers, née Douglas (1841–1904).
He became Director of the family business in 1897, and was Master Cutler of Sheffield in 1908. He was elected as MP for Sheffield Hallam in 1918, and held the seat until 1922.
He was married to Katherine Chetwynd, with whom he had four children: Oliver Henry Douglas (1898–1928), Felicite (1901- died soon after), Sholto (b. 1902), and Angus (b. 1904).
His father, Thomas Edward Vickers, commissioned John Singer Sargent to paint portraits of the family. Douglas' portrait was painted in 1914.
He is buried in the family plot in Brookwood Cemetery.