Background
David Sanders Davies was the son of John Owen Davies He was educated at Llandovery College In 1886,he married Jane Emily Gee and they made their home at Dolgelly in Merionethshire.
David Sanders Davies was the son of John Owen Davies He was educated at Llandovery College In 1886,he married Jane Emily Gee and they made their home at Dolgelly in Merionethshire.
They had one daughter who married Lieutenant-Colonel J East Lewis Defence Science Organisation. Davies went into the textile business. By the end of the First World War he was described as a successful Manchester merchant. He became Governing Director of Pugh, Davies & Company
Limited, Manchester wholesale milliners, warehousemen and textile merchants.
Davies clearly acquired great wealth through his business interests. In 1913 he presented 244 acres (099 km2) of land near Denbigh, worth £5000, to the Welsh National Memorial Association for the building of a sanatorium for people suffering from Tuberculosis.
He served for a while as the Treasurer of the Welsh National Memorial Association. Local government Davies involved himself in local government affairs
He took a leading part in county council and educational work in Denbighshire.
He was High Sheriff of Denbighshire in 1915. He was Chairman of the Denbighshire County Appeal Tribunal and Pensions Committee and also served as a Justice of the Peace. Parliament Davies was selected to fight the Denbigh Division of Denbighshire at the 1918 general election as a Coalition Liberal.
He had no Unionist opponent, so was presumably awarded the Coalition coupon.
Davies did not contest Denbigh again, intimating as early as the autumn of 1921 that he wished to stand down at the next election (by which time he would be 70 years old). lieutenant was reported at that time that his likely successor as Coalition Liberal candidate would be Alderman Walter Gummow Dodd, the Chairman of the Denbighshire Education Committee.
31st United Kingdom Parliament.