Background
Charles Royle was the son of Samuel and Mary Royle. He married Maria, the daughter of Oliver Wolfe and they had four sons and two daughters.
Charles Royle was the son of Samuel and Mary Royle. He married Maria, the daughter of Oliver Wolfe and they had four sons and two daughters.
He was educated at Portwood Wesleyan Higher Grade School.
After leaving school, Royle went straight to work in the meat trade, eventually qualifying as a master butcher. He gained the respect and confidence of his peers in the trade and became President of the National Federation of Meat Traders Associations, a position he held twice in 1929 and 1942. Local politics Royle had a long career in local government.
In 1947 he was made a freeman of the Borough of Stockport.
Parliament Royle first stood for election to the House of Commons at the 1923 general election in Stockport. Stockport was a two-member seat.
The two members since the by-election of 1920 caused by the death of one and the resignation of the other sitting Lloyd George Coalition government MPs had been the Conservative William Greenwood and the National Liberal Henry Fildes. At the 1923 general election Royle joined Fildes as the Liberal team to fight the two seats.
This time Fildes was fighting as a Liberal without prefix or suffix.
In the event Greenwood retained his seat for the Tories and Royle leapfrogged over Fildes to take the second seat for the Liberals. At the 1924 general election however, Royle was unable to hold his seat. What the arrangement was between Royle and Fildes is uncertain but when Greenwood died on 19 August 1925 causing a by-election in Stockport it was Fildes rather than Royle who was adopted to fight the seat for the Liberals.
Townend fought again for Labour winning the contest and holding the seat until 1931.
Royle fought Stockport again, as a pair with Fildes, at the 1929 general election, although this time he was described on the ticket as an Independent Liberal. but he came bottom of the poll and lost his deposit. At the 1935 General election, he contested Lancaster as a Labour Party candidate and finished third.
He died on 3 November 1963 aged 91 years.
33rd United Kingdom Parliament]
He was a member of Stockport Town Council for 44 years in all, rising to be an Alderman and Mayor of the town four times.