Edward Jenkins
Edward Jenkins was born in Bangalore, Karnataka, India on July 2nd, 1838 and is the British Politician. At the age of 71, Edward Jenkins biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Jenkins made his name as the author of the satire Ginx's Baby: his birth and other misfortunes, published in 1870. The book described a child born in poverty who became the victim of rival philanthropists.
He wrote at least two other satires, Lord Bantam (1871) and Barney Geoghegan, M.P (1872). The review of Lord Bantam in The Times newspaper in 1872 describes a political novel telling the story of a young nobleman of radical politics who enters Parliament supporting a redistribution of land and power, but who promptly abandons his radicalism when he inherits his father's peerage and large estates. The reviewer denounces the book as a vehicle for "Red Republican opinions", and remarks that the author wants the reader to conclude that "the working classes need never expect to derive any permanent advancement from the Radical professions of young lords who have such a stake in the existing institutions of the country". Jenkins supported the campaigns of the Warwickshire agricultural trade unionist Joseph Arch, and his novel Little Hodge (1873) dealt with the plight of landless labourers in England.
As well as the satires, Jenkins wrote a series of novels and many non-fiction-works, most of them relating to Canada.
He travelled in 1870 to Guiana on behalf of the English Benevolent Society, to "report of the condition of the coolies" (i.e. indentured labourers). His report was published in 1871, and resulted in the improvement of their conditions.
Jenkins stood for Parliament at two by-elections in the 1870s: Truro in September 1871, and Dundee in August 1873.
He was elected a member of parliament (MP) for Dundee at the 1874 general election The city was such a Liberal stronghold that its two seats were contested by four Liberals and one Conservative, and the lone Conservative came last of the five candidates. Jenkins won the seat despite being in America during the election in February, while on a lecture tour in Canada, he was appointed as the agent-general of the Dominion of Canada. His duties in that role were clarified to the House of Commons of Canada in May 1874 by the Canadian Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie, who said that Jenkins would have surveillance of the Canadian emigration business in London, would occasionally be asked to attend to other business of a confidential nature. He would also be "expected to give some little attention to Canadian gentlemen sojourning in London". He held the post for two years.
On his return to Dundee in March, he addressed a meeting of electors in the Kinnaird Hall, Dundee. Between 2,000 and 3,000 people attended, with hundreds turned away because the hall was full.
Jenkins did not contest the 1880 general election, but stood unsuccessfully at a by-election in January 1881 for Edinburgh. He contested Dundee again at the 1885 and 1892 general elections as a Conservative, but was unsuccessful on both occasions.
He died in London on 4 June 1910, having been paralysed for some years.