Lothian Small

Gladstone Lothian Rosebery Small (31 August 1884 – early 1979[1]) was a British labour movement activist.

Afterwards, he became a frequent Parliamentary candidate for the Labour Party, standing unsuccessfully in Exeter at the 1923 general election, then in Walsall in 1924 and a 1925 by-election.

[4][5][6] In 1923, Small made the news when he was held up by robbers near Palermo who stole his money and papers; he stated that he believed they had committed the robbery due to hunger.

She died in 1939,[5] and Small remarried to a Swiss woman named Jeanne-Marie de Morsier who worked at the International Union of Child Welfare.

[6] They lived in London until the 1950s; at this point, they appear to have moved to Manchester, and based there, Small translated a book on the history of Painting of Central Asia published by Skira[7] and a number of plays from Italian into English.

Small c. 1925