Background
He was the son of William Peer Groves, of Springbank, Pendleton, near Salford and was educated privately and at Owen"s College, Manchester.
He was the son of William Peer Groves, of Springbank, Pendleton, near Salford and was educated privately and at Owen"s College, Manchester.
He became chairman and managing director of Groves and Whitnall Limited, owners of the Regent Road Brewery, Salford. He held the seat for the Conservatives. In November 1900 a number of arsenic poisonings in the Manchester area were traced to beer from the Groves and Whitnall Brewery, and consequently a large amount of the company"s stock had to be destroyed.
In 1903, he was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Cheshire.
Groves only served one term in the Commons, losing his seat to Hilaire Belloc in the Liberal landslide at the 1906 general election. He died in June 1914 aged 59, after a long illness.
27th United Kingdom Parliament]
Groves was the chairman of the Salford Conservative Association, and when the member of parliament for Salford South announced his retirement prior to the 1900 general election, he was selected as the party"s candidate.