Thomas Cook (MP for North Norfolk)

Sir Thomas Russell Albert Mason Cook JP (12 June 1902 – 12 August 1970) was a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom.

[6] He was defeated again by Labour's Noel Buxton at the 1929 general election, and at the by-election in 1930 when Lady Noel-Buxton held the seat with a majority of only 139 votes after her husband's elevation to the peerage.

[6] He was a director of his family firm, the Thomas Cook & Son travel agency,[10] which had been founded by his great-grandfather.

He was county commissioner for the Norfolk St John Ambulance Brigade and Master of the Glaziers' Company in London.

This article about a Conservative Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom representing an English constituency and born in the 1900s is a stub.