Skip to main content
Menu

Life and career

Photograph of the House of Lords in session, 22 July 1982

Parliamentary Archives,  PIC/P/910

Tufton Beamish was an army officer and Conservative MP for Lewes between 1945 and 1974. He subsequently became a member of the House of Lords. He  was a passionate environmental campaigner and a member of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and the Nature Conservancy Council. In 1954 he secured the passage of the Protection of Birds Act, which was at that time the longest private member's bill to go before the House of Commons. This section of the case study explores his life and career in Parliament.

Election to Parliament
Image of UK Parliament portcullis

When was Tufton Beamish elected to Parliament?

Protection of Birds Act, 1954
Image of UK Parliament portcullis

Tufton Beamish was passionate about the protection of wildlife. Find out more about his involvement with conservation legislation here.

What was the legacy of the Protection of Birds Act (1954)?
Image of UK Parliament portcullis

What legislative change affecting nature conservation happened after the Protection of Birds Act (1954)?

House of Lords
Image of UK Parliament portcullis

What did Tufton Beamish achieve in his later life? When did he enter the House of Lords?

Early life
Image of UK Parliament portcullis

What was Tufton Beamish's early life like? Where did he grow up?

Latest tweets

Loading...

Related information

The De Montfort Project is an outreach project run by the Parliamentary Archives which explores the life and impact of local MPs and Peers on both their local area and at Parliament.

~/link/94ad97549be94fd68d3919ef23e27f2c.aspx

The De Montfort Project is an outreach projectrun by the Parliamentary Archiveswhichexplores the life and impact of local MPs and Peers on both their local area and at Parliament.

Find out more