Background
Patricia Smiles was born at Donaghadee and educated at Bangor Collegiate School, Glendower Preparatory School, London, and abroad. Her father was Ulster Unionist Member of Parliament Sir Walter D. Smiles and her mother Margaret Heigway.
Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
Patricia Smiles was born at Donaghadee and educated at Bangor Collegiate School, Glendower Preparatory School, London, and abroad. Her father was Ulster Unionist Member of Parliament Sir Walter D. Smiles and her mother Margaret Heigway.
Mrs Beeton was her great-aunt. Mrs Ford, as she then was, returned from living in Cheshire upon her father"s death in the Move Files Princess Victoria disaster in January 1953 and was returned unopposed to Parliament from his North Down constituency. In her maiden speech to the House she was required to apologise for an article she had written in the Sunday Express in which she mentioned that Bessie Braddock and Edith Summerskill had been snoring whilst asleep in the lady members" room.
The matter was referred to the Committee for Privileges.
Ford was a strong proponent of equal pay between the sexes and rode in a horse-drawn carriage to Parliament to draw attention to the matter. She retired at the 1955 general election.
In 1972 she founded and was co-chairman of the Women Caring Trust, now Hope for Youth Northern Ireland. She was expelled from the Orange Order"s women"s section for attending a wedding at the Brompton Oratory.
In 1941, Patricia Smiles married cricketer Neville Montagu Ford, son of the Very Review
Lionel George Bridges Justice Ford and grandson of 4th Lord Lyttelton.
Orange Order; 40th United Kingdom Parliament]
She was the first woman Member of Parliament from Northern Ireland, and the second woman to be returned to a seat in Westminster from a constituency in Ireland (the first to take her seat).