Sir Thomas Davies (15 August 1858 – 17 November 1939)[1] was a British Conservative Party politician.
He was the member of parliament (MP) for the Cirencester and Tewkesbury division of Gloucestershire from 1918 to 1929.
[3] Their second son was the historian of seventeenth-century England, Godfrey Davies.
From 1899 to 1910 he was a member of Gloucestershire County Council for Campden,[4] and was listed in 1922 an Alderman of the Council and Chairman of Cirencester War Pension Committee.
[2] He was elected at the 1918 general election as MP for Cirencester and Tewkesbury,[5] standing as a Coalition Unionist (i.e. a supporter of the Conservative-dominated coalition government led by the Liberal David Lloyd George).