After serving as a major in
World War II, he was selected by the Liberal Party to contest
Orkney and Shetland, the most northerly constituency in the United Kingdom. He narrowly missed capturing the seat in 1945 but won it at the
1950 general election. The Liberals and their successors, the Liberal Democrats, have retained the seat continuously to the present day. Grimond continued to represent the constituency until he retired from politics in
1983, and regularly polled more than 60% of the vote.
Leader of the Liberal Party The party Grimond inherited from former leader
Clement Davies had secured only 2.7% of the vote in the 1955 general election. However, this result represented a modest recovery in Liberal Party's fortunes compared with its performance in 1951. Under Grimond's leadership, this progress continued. He helped restore the Liberals as a notable political force by the time he stepped down as leader in 1967. It was during his tenure that the first post-war Liberal revival took place: under Grimond's leadership, the Liberals doubled their seat tally and won historic by-elections at
Torrington in 1958 (the first by-election gain by the Liberal Party for 29 years),
Orpington in 1962, and
Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles in 1965. In 1961-2, the Liberals almost succeeded in capturing
Blackpool North,
West Derbyshire and
Chippenham from the Conservatives and
Paisley and
Leicester North East from Labour. Grimond's dynamic and principled leadership proved attractive to many young aspiring politicians, including
John Pardoe and three future party leaders,
David Steel,
Paddy Ashdown and
Sir Menzies Campbell. In 1967, having led the party through three general elections, he made way for a younger leader, the charismatic
Jeremy Thorpe. In 1976, when Thorpe was forced to resign because of
a scandal, Grimond stepped in as interim leader until the election of a replacement,
David Steel. Among other posts, Grimond was a barrister and publisher in the 1930s, an army major during
World War II, Secretary of the
National Trust for Scotland from 1947 to 1949, and held the
Rectorships of the
University of Edinburgh and the
University of Aberdeen and the Chancellorship of the
University of Kent at Canterbury (
elected in 1970). His many books include
The Liberal Future (1959, credited with reinvigorating radical liberalism as a coherent modern ideology),
The Liberal Challenge (1963), and
Memoirs (1979). He was the subject of
This Is Your Life in 1983 when he was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews.
Retirement and death Upon leaving the
House of Commons, he was created a
life peer as
Baron Grimond, of Firth in the County of
Orkney on 12 October 1983. He remained devoted to his former parliamentary constituency, and was buried in
Finstown on
Orkney. ==Marriage and children==