Background
He was the son of the Reverend James Sears, a Baptist minister in Camberwell in south London, and quickly became involved in the activities of the church as a teacher and librarian.
He was the son of the Reverend James Sears, a Baptist minister in Camberwell in south London, and quickly became involved in the activities of the church as a teacher and librarian.
Sears was educated privately before being articled to C G Searle and South C Searle, architects in 1872. At the same time he studied architecture at University College London and the Royal Academy Schools.
He was also the leader of the local Band of Hope temperance organisation and was associated with Baptist churches in the Peckham area. He became a qualified architect in 1880 and was made a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1889. Foreign several years he acted as editor of the annual Architect’s Compendium and Catalogue.
He subsequently moved to Hendon in Middlesex, a northern suburb of London.
The Progressives were allied to the parliamentary Liberal Party. He became the chairman of the council"s Bridges and Housing Committees.
He was re-elected in 1904. At the 1906 general election Sears was chosen by the Liberals to contest the constituency of Cheltenham.
He served a single term in the Commons, and the Conservatives regained the Cheltenham seat at the next election in January 1910.
He died at his home in Teddington in January 1941 aged 83.
28th United Kingdom Parliament]
He was a member of the Hendon School Board and a deacon of Hendon Baptist Church. In 1901 Sears was elected to the London County Council as a member of the majority Progressive Party representing Hackney North. The seat had been held by the Conservative Party since the 1880s, but Sears unexpectedly unseated James Agg-Gardner, the sitting member of parliament.