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British politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brigadier John Percival Whiteley OBE (7 January 1898 – 4 July 1943[1]) was a British Army officer and a Conservative Party politician.
Born in January 1898 in South Africa,[2] Whiteley was commissioned into the Royal Artillery during the First World War, ending the war as a lieutenant. In 1926 he transferred to the Life Guards, retiring in 1928 and joining the 99th (Buckinghamshire and Berkshire Yeomanry) Field Brigade, Royal Artillery (Territorial Army) as a captain. He was promoted major in 1932.
He stood unsuccessfully at the 1929 general election in Birmingham Aston,[3] and entered the House of Commons eight years later when he was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Buckingham at a by-election in 1937, after the sitting MP George Bowyer was elevated to the peerage as Baron Denham.[4]
When World War II broke out, Whiteley resumed military service.[5] He was active at Dunkirk,[5] and died in 1943, aged 45, when he was killed in a plane crash in Gibraltar, along with the Conservative MP Victor Cazalet and General Władysław Sikorski, the leader of the Polish government-in-exile.[5]
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