Background
He was born in Manchester, and was the son of William Eales of Luton.
Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
He was born in Manchester, and was the son of William Eales of Luton.
He served "articles" in a Luton solicitor"s office, becoming a solicitor himself in 1904. He became a partner in a law firm in Coventry in the following year. In 1910 he called to the bar at the Middle Temple, and practiced on the Midland Circuit, with his Chambers in Birmingham.
As his practice grew, he moved to London in 1921.
In 1928 he was appointed Recorder of Coventry and in 1934 Recorder of Nottingham. In 1929 he "took silk" to become a king"s counsel
In 1931 he was nominated to contest the general election at Birmingham Erdington. The seat had been lost by the Conservatives in 1929, when C J Simmons of the Labour Party had been elected.
Eales benefitted from a big swing against Labour, and regained the seat with a majority of nearly 19,000 votes.
Eales died suddenly from a heart attack while on holiday in Whitby, Yorkshire on 6 August 1936, aged 55.
At the next election four years later he successfully defended the seat.
36th United Kingdom Parliament. 37th United Kingdom Parliament]
Eales was an active member of the Conservative Party, and had been involved in the party"s campaigns in the Coventry and Nuneaton constituencies in the 1920s.