Background
Frederick Joseph Laverack was born in Leeds, the younger son of George Laverack, grocer and tea merchant, and Elizabeth Turner.
Frederick Joseph Laverack was born in Leeds, the younger son of George Laverack, grocer and tea merchant, and Elizabeth Turner.
He was educated at Street George’s School, Leeds Ranmoor College, Sheffield and privately. He studied the law but did not pursue it as a profession.
His chief social and philanthropic work was in assisting the blind. In 1916 he joined Sir Arthur Pearson the newspaper magnate and campaigner for the blind and organised the Blinded Soldiers’ Children Fund. He undertook the re-organisation of the Chaplain’s Department of the National Institute for the Blind and was sometime Joint Secretary of the Greater London Fund for the Blind.
He was a former director and general organiser of the Association for the Promoting the General Welfare of the Blind and was a highly successful fund-raiser for charitable purposes and well known as a speaker and lecturer on social causes.
By 1922 he was being described as a business expert and organiser. He was also connected with the fund raising activities of the temperance organisation the Band of Hope Union.
Anti Waste League
The Anti Waste League was founded by Lord Rothermere in 1921 and campaigned for reductions in government spending and taxation. Laverack was a member and was among the first list of candidates announced by the League to fight constituencies in London.
Laverack was selected to fight Street Pancras North.
As a result of the campaign, the anti-waste call was taken up more vigorously inside the Conservative Party and the League was disbanded in 1922. Laverack gravitated to the Liberal Party. 1922-1924
Laverack was selected as Liberal candidate at the 1922 general election for the Brixton Division of Lambeth.
The Anti-Waste League endorsed his candidacy but Laverack could not dislodge the sitting Conservative Member of Parliament Sir Davison Dalziel.
He fought Dalziel again at the 1923 general election and was this time successful. This position was reversed however at the 1924 general election when Laverack faced Labour as well as Tory opponents.
Dalziel was re-elected and Laverack dropped to the foot of the poll behind Labour. Brixton by-election, 1927
In 1927 Dalziel was given a peerage and this caused a by-election in Brixton.
Laverack was re-selected as Liberal candidate and there again faced a three-cornered contest against Conservative and Labour opponents.
The by-election was held on 27 June 1927 and the Conservatives easily retained the seat with 48% of the poll. Lavarack was again in third place behind Labour. This was to prove his last attempt to re-enter Parliament.
Laverack died from heart disease at his home in Upper Norwood, Surrey on 11 April 1928.
33rd United Kingdom Parliament.