Stephen King-Hall


William Stephen Richard King-Hall, Baron King-Hall of Headley was a British naval officer, writer, politician and playwright who served as the member of parliament for Ormskirk from 1939 to 1945.

Early life and career

The son of Admiral Sir George Fowler King-Hall and Olga Felicia Ker; theirs was an artistic naval family, King-Hall's sisters Magdalen and Lou also being writers. He married Kathleen Amelia Spencer, daughter of Francis Spencer, on 15 April 1919 and they had three children, Ann, Frances Susan and Jane.
He was educated at Lausanne in Switzerland and at the Royal Naval College in Dartmouth. Him fought in the First World War between 1914 and 1918, with the Grand Fleet, serving on and 11th Submarine Flotilla. He gained the rank of commander in the service of the Royal Navy in 1928, before resigning in 1929. He wrote several plays between 1924 and 1940, including Posterity accepted by Leonard Woolf for the Hogarth Essays. He joined the Royal Institute of International Affairs in 1929, having previously been awarded their gold medal for his 1920 thesis on submarine warfare.

Member of Parliament

He entered the House of Commons in 1939 as Member of Parliament for Ormskirk unopposed, standing as the National Labour candidate. He later changed his affiliation and continued to stand as an Independent, subsequently losing the seat to future Prime Minister Harold Wilson in the 1945 general election. During his term, he served in the Ministry of Aircraft Production under Max Aitken as Director of the Factory Defence Section.
In 1944 he founded and chaired the Hansard Society to promote parliamentary democracy. He presented a programme for children on current affairs on both BBC radio and television.

Life after Parliament and death

He was invested as a Knight Bachelor on 6 July 1954 and was created a Life Peer as Baron King-Hall of Headley on 15 January 1966. He lived at Hartfield House, Headley until his death in Westminster on 2 June 1966.

Political and Historical

A Naval Lieutenant, 1914–1918 as "Etienne" Diary of a U-Boat-Commander 1918, as "Etienne", 1918 Western Civilisation and the Far East, 1924 Imperial Defence The China of To-day The War at Sea, 1914–1918 Submarines in the Future of Naval Warfare, 1920. Thesis.Our Own Times, 2 vols, 1935 A North Sea Diary : 1914-18, Newnes, London, 1936. A "new edition" of his earlier A Naval Lieutenant under pseudonym "Etienne".London Newsletter, 1936. Total Victory, 1941 Britain's Third Chance, 1943 My Naval Life, Faber and Faber, London, 1952,History in Hansard, 1952 The Communist Conspiracy, 1953 Defence in the Nuclear Age. Gollancz, London, 1958; Nyack, N.Y.: Fellowship, 1959. Common Sense in Defence, 1960 Men of Destiny, 1960 Our Times, 1900–1960, 1961 Power Politics in the Nuclear age. Gollancz, London, 1962.
In Defence in the Nuclear Age he advocated a British policy of unilateral nuclear disarmament and national defence involving some reliance on conventional military force. This was to be supplemented by "a defence system of non-violence against violence" - what is often called "defence by civil resistance" or "social defence".
In Men of Destiny he criticised all sides for the creation of the Cold War and further promoted his aim of nuclear disarmament.
There have been several accounts and appraisals of his work advocating unilateral nuclear disarmament and defence by civil resistance.

Children

Letters to Hilary, 1928 Hilary Growing Up, 1929, E. Benn, London. The crowning of the King and Queen, 1937
"Hilary Growing Up" was described by the author as building ''"upon the foundations laid down in its predecessor Letters to Hilary. This book is for children from twelve to ninety... a series of essays, or talks... on sociology."''

Novels

Moment of No Return, Ballantine Books, New York, 1961. A Cold - War novel about tensions between the Soviet Bloc and the West.

Plays

Posterity, 1927The Middle Watch, 1929The Midshipmaid, 1931Admirals All, 1934Tropical Trouble, 1936The Middle Watch, 1940Off the Record, 1947Girls at Sea, 1958

Radio