1943 St Albans by-election
The 1943 St Albans by-election was a parliamentary by-election held in England in October 1943 for the UK House of Commons constituency of St Albans in Hertfordshire.
The by-election was held to fill the vacancy caused when the town's Conservative Party Member of Parliament, Sir Francis Fremantle, died suddenly at home on 26 August, aged 71. Fremantle had held the seat since a [1919 St Albans (UK Parliament constituency)|St Albans by-election|by-election in 1919].
Candidates
The Conservative Party nominated as its candidate 31-year-old John Grimston, who was then serving in the Royal Air Force. Grimston was the son and heir of the 4th Earl of Verulam, and a cousin of the Assistant Postmaster-General Robert Grimston MP.In accordance with an electoral truce between the parties in the wartime coalition government, neither the Liberal nor Labour parties nominated a candidate.
However, the dramatist William Douglas-Home, who was then an officer of the Royal Armoured Corps and an opponent of the policy of requiring the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany, announced that he would stand as an independent candidate.
Polling day was set for 14 October.
Nominations closed on 5 October, when Douglas-Home abandoned his plans to stand, because the necessary permission from the Army Council had not been received, despite an application having been made on 22 September. However, a statement from the Army Council said that permission had been granted that afternoon, and blamed the delay on Douglas-Home not marking the application as urgent. Douglas-Home's agent R. T. A. Cornwell was unable to contact the would-be candidate to let him know that permission had finally been granted, because Douglas-Home was away on "some protracted military exercise". He had come up to London in a torn battledress in the morning, and had left after announcing his withdrawal.