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Ernest Craig

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir Ernest Craig, 1st Baronet (1859 – 9 April 1933)[1] was a British Conservative Party politician.

He was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for the Crewe division of Cheshire at a by-election in July 1912 after the death of his Liberal predecessor, Walter McLaren.[2] Craig did not stand for re-election in 1918, when the seat was won a Coalition Liberal, and his next candidacy was at the 1924 general election, when he won the seat in a straight contest with the sitting Labour Party MP Edward Hemmerde. He stepped down from the House of Commons at the 1929 general election.[3]

In the King's Birthday Honours 1927, he was made a baronet on 1 July 1927, of Alsager in Cheshire.[4][5]

Ernest Craig, before becoming a politician, along with many other Englishmen went west to the US and to New Mexico in particular. He owned the Last Chance Mine in Mogollon, Grant County, New Mexico, and a picture survives of him in 1908 seated in a motor vehicle at Hudson Springs (now Faywood Hot Springs). He introduced innovative methods of extracting gold. He also established a horse and buggy transport for mining company property movement between Mogollon and Silver City. His only child, Ernestine, later acquired the Mimbres Hot Springs, a few miles from Faywood. Her son Craig Wheaton-Smith managed the Mimbres Hot Springs ranch, and her grandson Simon Wheaton-Smith (Ernest Craig's great-grandson) also resides in Silver City, New Mexico.

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Leigh Rayment's House of Commons pages.
  2. ^ Craig 1989, p. 231.
  3. ^ Craig 1983, p. 303.
  4. ^ "No. 33280". The London Gazette. 31 May 1927. p. 3603.
  5. ^ "No. 33292". The London Gazette. 8 July 1927. p. 4406.

Sources

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Crewe
19121918
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Crewe
19241929
Succeeded by
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Alsager)
1927–1933
Extinct