Background
She was born in Taunton, Somerset, where her father was a railway guard.
She was born in Taunton, Somerset, where her father was a railway guard.
The family moved to Wolverhampton, where she later became a schoolteacher. A Methodist lay preacher, she was initially a Liberal, but joined the Independent Labour Party (ILP) in 1917. Under her maiden name of Florence Widdowson, she first stood for Parliament at the Cheltenham by-election in 1928, and at the 1929 general election, she contested the Rushcliffe constituency in Nottinghamshire.
When the ILP split from Labour in 1932, John and Florence Paton stayed with the ILP. They left the following year, and rejoined the Labour Party, but by then the Ruschcliffe Constituency Labour Party had selected H.J. Cadogan as its prospective parliamentary candidate.
She was reselected as candidate only after Cadogan had been defeated in the 1934 by-election and at the 1935 general election. She lost by only 395 votes to the Conservative Party candidate Kenneth Pickthorn, and although she stood again in 1951 and 1955, Pickthorn increased his majority on each occasion.
At the start of the 1946-1947 session of Parliament, she was nominated by the Speaker to the Chairmen"s Panel of Members to act as temporary chairmen of committees of the whole House and chairmen of standing committees. During a supply day debate on Scottish civil aviation estimates on 31 May 1948, she became the first woman to preside over the whole House of Commons.
She did not, however, sit in the Speaker"s Chair.
When the House is in committee, the chairman sits at the table, rather than in the Speaker"s Chair. The first woman to occupy the Speaker"s Chair was the Conservative Party Member of Parliament Betty Harvie Anderson (Conservative), on 2 July 1970, who took the Chair during the debate on the Queen"s Speech. In 1947, she was a British delegate to the United Nations.
She died in Wolverhampton on 12 October 1976.
Her husband John, who had held his parliamentary seat until 1964, died two months later.
38th United Kingdom Parliament]
From 1955 to 1958, Paton was a member of the Royal Commission on common land.