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Ernest Lucas Guest

Colonel The Honourable
Sir Ernest Lucas Guest
KBE CMG CVO LLD
Ernest Lucas Guest.jpg
Portrait of Col Ernest Lucas Guest
Minister of Defence and Air
In office
7 June 1946 – 15 September 1948
Monarch George VI
Prime Minister Godfrey Martin Huggins
Minister of Finance
In office
7 May 1946 – 26 September 1946
Minister of Air
In office
28 March 1940 – 6 May 1946
Minister of Mines and Public Works
In office
1 June 1938 – 1 February 1944
Member of Southern Rhodesian Legislative Assembly
In office
25 April 1946 – 15 September 1948
Prime Minister Godfrey Huggins
Preceded by Sir Percival Donald Leslie Fynn
Succeeded by Noel St. Quinton
Constituency Salisbury Gardens
Member of Southern Rhodesian Legislative Assembly
In office
19 September 1928 – 24 April 1946
Monarch
Prime Minister
Preceded by Charles Edward Gilfillan
Succeeded by Jacob Letterstedt Smit
Constituency Charter
Personal details
Born (1882-08-20)20 August 1882
Grahamstown, Cape Colony
Died 20 September 1972(1972-09-20) (aged 90)
Salisbury, Rhodesia
Nationality British
Political party Rhodesia Party (1928–1933)
United Party (1933–1946)
Spouse(s) Lady Edie Guest
Relations Ivor Forbes Guest (nephew)
Melville Guest (grandson)
Children
Parents Herbert Melville Guest
Residence Salisbury, Rhodesia
Alma mater St Andrew's College, Grahamstown
Profession politician, soldier, lawyer
Military service
Allegiance  British Empire
Years of service 1899–1919
Rank Lieutenant-Colonel
Battles/wars

Sir Ernest Lucas Guest KBE, CMG, CVO, LLD (20 August 1882 – 20 September 1972) was a Rhodesian politician, lawyer and soldier. He held senior ministerial positions in the government, most notably as Minister for Air during the Second World War.

Guest was born in Grahamstown, Cape Colony. His grandfather had moved the family there, leaving Kidderminster, England, where it had been in the printing business for three generations. He saw active service in the Second Boer War, enlisting despite being underage, and again in the First World War, when he was injured in France. His legal career began while back in Southern Rhodesia between those two wars. He won a case against Sir Charles Coghlan, at the time Premier of Southern Rhodesia, and Coghlan invited him to become a partner in his firm, which became known as Coghlan, Welsh & Guest. On his return from the First World War, Guest took responsibility for the Salisbury practice.

He was elected to the Legislative Assembly in 1928 as a member of Coghlan's Rhodesia Party, representing the constituency of Charter, which he held until 1946. He first became a cabinet minister in Godfrey Huggins' government, appointed Minister of Mines and Public Works in June 1938. During the Second World War, Guest was Minister for Air and administered the Rhodesia Air Training Group. After the war he was also Minister of Defence, Minister of Finance and Leader of the House. At the 1946 elections he stood for Salisbury Gardens and held the seat until his retirement from office in 1948.


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