David James Davies

D. J. Davies
Born
David James Davies

2 June 1893
Died11 October 1956
Resting placeCarmel, Carmarthenshire, Wales
NationalityWelsh
EducationAberystwyth University,
Seattle University,
Colorado State University Pueblo
Occupations
Employer(s)Northwestern Coal and Coke Co., United States Navy, Collierycollier
Known forInfluential essayist and economist
SpouseNoëlle Ffrench
Parent(s)Thomas Davies and Ellen (née Williams)

David James Davies (1893–1956), known as D. J. Davies, was a Welsh economist,[1] industrialist,[2] essayist,[1] author,[1] political activist, pilot,[2] and an internationalist.[1] Davies was a world traveller before returning home to Wales.

Initially a founding member of the Welsh Labour Party in the Ammanford district, in 1925 he left Labour becoming a founding member of Plaid Cymru, the nationalist party of Wales.[1]

According to the historian John Davies, it was D. J. Davies' ideas which were more influential in shaping long-term Plaid Cymru ideology following the Second World War, and Davies was as "equally [a] significant figure" as Saunders Lewis in Welsh nationalism history, but it was Lewis' "brilliance and charismatic appeal" which was firmly associated with Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru of the 1930s.[2][3][4]

  1. ^ a b c d e National Library of Wales, Welsh Biography Online, extracted 16 February 2009
  2. ^ a b c Why Not a Welsh Royal Family? by Siôn T Jobbins, January 2008, Cambria magazine
  3. ^ John Davies, A History of Wales, Pages 591, 592
  4. ^ John Davies, Wales and America

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