Background
Born Clement Cooke in 1854, the only son of Robert Whall Cooke in Brighton, Sussex, he was educated at Brighton College, and at Saint John"s College, Cambridge, where he read mathematics and law.
Born Clement Cooke in 1854, the only son of Robert Whall Cooke in Brighton, Sussex, he was educated at Brighton College, and at Saint John"s College, Cambridge, where he read mathematics and law.
Street John"s College.
He was called to the bar in 1883 by the Inner Temple, whereupon he joined the Oxford Circuit, and became Treasury prosecuting counsel for Berkshire. Later he was legal advisor to the House of Lords Sweating Commission and private secretary to Windham Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1885-1887). He was also examiner under the Civil Service Commission for factory inspectorships.
Cooke followed with an active career in journalism, writing and editing for English Illustrated Magazine, the Observer, the Pall Mall Gazette, and the New Review.
He wrote on imperial and colonial subjects. During this time he also wrote an authorised memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, Duchess of Teck, and a biography of Mary of Teck.
He founded the Empire Review in 1901 and that connexion remained for the remainder of his life. Cooke assumed the additional surname of Kinloch in 1905, which was also the year that he was initially created a knight bachelor.
From that time a career in politics followed.
He was returned to the House of Commons the following year as Member of Parliament for Cardiff East, and held that seat until he was defeated at the 1929 general election. He served as chairman of Naval and Dockyards Committee for 14 years, and the Expiring Laws and Continuance Acting Committee. He was created a Knight Commander in the Order of the British Empire in 1919, and a baronet of Brighthelmstone, Sussex in 1926.
He died 4 September 1944, in Wimbledon at the age of 89.
29th United Kingdom Parliament. 30th United Kingdom Parliament. 31st United Kingdom Parliament.
32nd United Kingdom Parliament.
34th United Kingdom Parliament]
Kinloch-Cooke became a member of the London County Council in 1907. He was elected at the January 1910 general election as a Unionist Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Devonport, and he held that seat until his defeat at the 1923 general election by the Liberal Party candidate Leslie Hore-Belisha.