David Ennals, Baron Ennals

In Wolverhampton on his nineteenth birthday, 19 August 1941, he enlisted in the Royal Army Service Corps (RASC) and joined 9th Training Battalion (Drivers) at Alfreton.Landing in Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944, Lieutenant Ennals commanded a Contact Detachment providing wireless links between units.[14] Ennals returned to parliament representing Norwich North following the February 1974 general election and was appointed Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.After losing his seat in the general election of 1983, he was created a life peer, as Baron Ennals, of Norwich in the County of Norfolk.[18] In 1987 Lord Ennals went on a parliamentary fact-finding mission to Tibet and on his return to the UK he became a tireless campaigner for Tibetan independence and a friend of the 14th Dalai Lama.
The Right HonourableShadow Secretary of State for Social ServicesJames CallaghanPatrick JenkinStanley OrmeSecretary of State for Social ServicesBarbara CastleMinister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AffairsHarold WilsonTed RowlandsMember of ParliamentNorwich NorthGeorge WallacePatrick ThompsonJohn ArbuthnotPeter ReesWalsallBelsize ParkLabourLiberalBritish Labour PartyQueen Mary's Grammar SchoolLoomis InstituteWindsor, ConnecticutWalsall ObserverWolverhamptonRoyal Army Service CorpsAlfretonLanarkReconnaissance Corps3rd Regiment Reconnaissance Corps (NF)3rd Infantry Divisionservice numberLanding in Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944Royal Norfolk Regimentfracture of his right humerusRichmond (Surrey)1950 general election1966 electionParliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department1970 general electionWilson's Resignation HonoursPrivy CouncilFebruary 1974 general electionSir Douglas BlackBlack Reportgeneral election of 1983life peerNational Association for Mental HealthUnited Nations AssociationGandhi FoundationAnti-Apartheid MovementCommonwealth Immigrants Act 196814th Dalai LamaMartin EnnalsAmnesty InternationalSir Paul EnnalsNational Children's Bureaupancreatic cancerThe London GazetteHouse of Commons LibraryThe Edinburgh GazetteWayback MachineDalyell, TamThe IndependentThe New York TimesHansardParliament of the United KingdomLabour PartyGwyn MorganHealth secretaries of the United KingdomMinisters of healthChristopher AddisonAlfred MondArthur Griffith-BoscawenNeville ChamberlainWilliam Joynson-HicksJohn WheatleyArthur GreenwoodHilton YoungKingsley WoodWalter ElliotMalcolm MacDonaldErnest BrownHenry WillinkAneurin BevanHilary MarquandHarry CrookshankIain MacleodRobin TurtonDennis VosperDerek Walker-SmithEnoch PowellAnthony BarberKenneth RobinsonSecretaries of state for social servicesRichard CrossmanSir Keith JosephNorman FowlerJohn MooreSecretaries of state for healthKenneth ClarkeWilliam WaldegraveVirginia BottomleyStephen DorrellFrank DobsonAlan MilburnJohn ReidPatricia HewittAlan JohnsonAndy BurnhamAndrew LansleyJeremy HuntSecretaries of state for health and social careMatt HancockSajid JavidSteve BarclayThérèse CoffeyVictoria AtkinsWes StreetingSecretaries of state for work and pensions of the United KingdomPensionsBarnesWorthington-EvansMacphersonRobertsHudsonRamsbothamWomersleyPalingBuchananMarquandIsaacsHeathcoat-AmorySocial and national insuranceJowittHore-BelishaGriffithsSummerskillBoyd-CarpenterHerbisonSocial servicesCrossmanJosephCastleJenkinFowlerSocial securityNewtonLilleyHarmanDarlingWork and pensionsA. SmithJohnsonBlunkettHuttonPurnellCooperDuncan SmithCoffeyC. SmithStrideCallaghan CabinetJoel BarnettTony BennAlbert BoothAnthony CroslandEdmund DellLord Elwyn-JonesMichael FootRoy HattersleyDenis HealeyRoy JenkinsHarold LeverRoy MasonBruce MillanJohn MorrisFred MulleyDavid OwenLord PeartReg PrenticeMerlyn ReesBill RodgersLord ShepherdPeter ShoreJohn SilkinJohn SmithEric VarleyShirley Williams