Education
He then went to Corpus Christi College, Oxford where he obtained a Bachelor of Philosophy degree.
He then went to Corpus Christi College, Oxford where he obtained a Bachelor of Philosophy degree.
He was rated one of the more effective of the Labour Party"s 1964 intake to Parliament, but died at the age of 38. Rowland went to Chesterfield Grammar School and then the London School of Economics where he obtained a degree in Economic Science. Having joined the Labour Party in 1946, Rowland became an active participant in student politics: in 1952 he was Chairman of the London School of Economics Labour Society.
In 1953 he was elected Chairman of the National Association of Labour Student Organisations, a sabbatical post.
He also joined the Fabian Society, for whom he became Treasurer of the Africa Bureau. On leaving student politics in 1954 he was recruited by the British Broadcasting Corporation as a talks producer in the Overseas Service.
In 1957 he was on the Executive of the Commonwealth Fund Fellowship to the United States of America. When he fought Eastleigh in the 1959 general election, he had to leave the British Broadcasting Corporation which was committed to political neutrality (his dismissal became a controversy). In 1960 he moved to the Booker Group where he was an Information Officer.
He became Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Ministers of State at the Foreign Office.
In early 1966, Rowland went with two other Labour MPs (Jeremy Bray and David Ennals) out to (which had just declared independence) to see what conditions there were like and meet some of those involved. Supporters of Ian Smith asked to meet them and so the three agreed a time when they would talk. Unexpectedly, more than 400 turned up and a rowdy meeting ensued.
At the end, one of the ns attempted to snatch Rowland"s papers and Rowland, while attempting to get them back, was forced to the floor, kicked, punched and had water thrown over him.
Rowland was insistent that the Wilson government should not back down on confronting Ian Smith"s
He easily kept his seat with a much improved majority in the 1966 general election, profiting from his prominence after the incident. He beat Jonathan Aitken, then the youngest Conservative Party candidate.
His British Broadcasting Corporation experience showed when he pledged to vote against the government if it decided to allow commercial radio. In October 1967 he was taken ill on a visit to his constituency, and died two weeks later of pneumonia and pleurisy.
43rd United Kingdom Parliament. 44th United Kingdom Parliament.