Sir William Samuel Glyn-Jones (1869 – 9 September 1927) was a British Liberal Party politician and pharmacist.[1]
Background
He was born to Welsh parents in Worcester in 1869, the son of George Griffith Jones. He was educated at Merthyr TydfilGrammar School. He married in 1894, Mary Evans of Tower Hill, Llanybydder, Carmarthen. They had two sons and two daughters.[2] His eldest son, Hildreth Glyn-Jones, became an eminent barrister and High Court judge. His younger son, John, was an actor.
Career
He was Called to Bar, Middle Temple in 1904. He was appointed an Alderman to Middlesex County Council. Standing for the first time, he fought the January 1910 General Election as Liberal candidate for Stepney, coming second. He served as Liberal Member of Parliament for Stepney from December 1910–18. He gained the seat from the Conservatives at the December 1910 General Election. When his constituency was abolished in 1918 he decided to retire from parliament.[3]