David Penhaligon
Discover great deals on health and beauty supplies on ebay at bargain prices.

Penhaligon's

David Charles Penhaligon (June 6, 1944–December 22, 1986) was a British politician from Cornwall who was a Liberal Member of Parliament from 1974 until his death. more...

Home
Bath & Body
Dental Care
Dieting/ Slimming
Fragrances
Men's Fragrances/ Aftershave
Women's Fragrances
Adidas
Agent Provocateur
Alexander McQueen
Anna Sui
Armani
Avon
Balenciaga
Benetton
Body Shop
Boucheron
Britney Spears
Bulgari
Burberry
Cabochard
Cacharel
Calvin Klein
Carolina Herrera
Cartier
Carven
Cerruti
Chanel
Charlie
Chloe
Chopard
Christian Dior
Clarins
Clinique
Coty
Davidoff
Diesel
DKNY
Dolce & Gabbana
Elizabeth Arden
Elizabeth Taylor
Escada
Estee Lauder
Fendi
French Connection/ FCUK
Ghost
Gianni Versace
Giorgio of Beverly Hills
Givenchy
Gloria Vanderbilt
Gucci
Guerlain
Hermes
Hugo Boss
Iceberg
Isabella Rossellini
Issey Miyake
J Lo
Jasper Conran
Jean Patou
Jean-Paul Gaultier
Jil Sander
Jo Malone
Joop
Kangol
Karl Lagerfeld
Kenzo
La Perla
Lacoste
Lalique
Lancome
Lanvin
Lentheric
Lolita Lempicka
Madonna
Marc Jacobs
Michael Kors
Mixed Lots
Monro
Moschino
Narcisco Rodriguez
Next
Nina Ricci
Non-Designer Fragrances
Oscar de la Renta
Other Women's Fragrances
Paco Rabanne
Paloma Picasso
Paris Hilton
Paul Smith
Penhaligon's
Philosophy
Prada
Ralph Lauren
Revlon
Rochas
Shiseido
Sonia Rykiel
Stella McCartney
Ted Baker
Thierry Mugler
Tommy Hilfiger
Tova
Ungaro
Valentino
Vera Wang
Virgin Vie
Vivienne Westwood
Yardley
Yves Rocher
Yves Saint-Laurent
Hair Care
Hair Removal
Health Care
Make-Up/ Cosmetics
Massage
Mobility, Disability &...
Nails/ Manicure/ Pedicure
Natural/ Alternative...
Other Health & Beauty
Over-the-Counter Medicine
Skin/ Face Care
Tanning/ Sun Care
Tattoos/ Body Art
Vision/ Glasses/ Lenses
Vitamins/ Supplements

He was a popular figure in all parties and had potential to be a front-runner for the party leadership had he not been killed in a car accident.

Background

Penhaligon's father Robert ran a garage and caravan site in Truro. He was born on D-Day and brought up in Truro where he attended Truro School and then Cornwall Technical College where he studied mechanical engineering. He worked for Holman Brothers in Camborne as a research and development engineer working on rock drilling. By 1973 he had qualified as a Chartered Mechanical Engineer; he also took over from his father a sub-post office in Chacewater from 1967 (after his marriage in 1968 to Annette Lidgey, she ran the business). His Liberal activities led to some work in local broadcasting.

Penhaligon's decision to join the Liberal Party was inspired in 1963 when he was an important witness to a murder case. His evidence, which supported the case of the defendants, was not enough to prevent them from being convicted and hanged. Penhaligon was appalled by the practice of Capital punishment. He led the Truro Young Liberals and built up the local party (which had been the weakest in Cornwall) into one of the strongest; he was the chair of the Cornish Young Liberals from 1966 to 1968. However he was not selected as Liberal candidate for Truro in the 1966 general election (nor for any other seat), and he was also rejected for Falmouth and Camborne in 1968 apparently because his strong Cornish accent was thought unattractive.

In the 1970 general election he fought the Devon constituency of Totnes when the previous candidate Paul Tyler transferred to North Cornwall. He polled poorly in the context of an election in which the party as a whole suffered. However, Penhaligon had acquired useful experience of fighting election campaigns and picked up additional tips from Wallace Lawler's practices in inner-city Birmingham.

Campaigning in Truro

In 1971 Penhaligon was easily selected as candidate for Truro, a seat which did not look an easier prospect than Totnes. This gave him three years in which to get his name known and meet his prospective constituents (a practice known as 'nursing' a constituency) and when the election came in February 1974 he won nearly 21,000 votes and cut the majority of the sitting Conservative MP to 2,561. Truro became the fourth 'target' constituency for the Liberals for the next election — which would take place within months because of the inconclusive outcome in February.

Parliamentary activity

Penhaligon was readopted and worked on trying to persuade the remaining Labour voters in the seat to back him. In the October 1974 election he was elected with a majority of 464 votes – the only Liberal gain of that election. Due to House of Commons rules on 'offices of profit under the crown' he transferred his sub-postmastership to his wife. In Parliament he swiftly won a reputation for humorous speeches, urging a national minimum wage and increased state pensions. He voted for fellow Cornish MP John Pardoe over David Steel in the Liberal leadership election of 1976. He was hard to place in conventional political terms: he changed his mind over capital punishment, initially voting against in December 1974, but supporting it in December 1975.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


Click to see more Penhaligon's items
Prices current as of last update, 09/21/09 2:39am.


Home Contact Resources Exchange Links eBay