House of Lords data dashboard: Current membership of the House
This page provides interactive data on the current membership of the House of Lords.
Lord Constantine was a West Indian cricketer and politician, who became the first person of non-European descent to be awarded a life peerage. This briefing provides biographical information including an overview of Lord Constantine’s career and a summary of his maiden speech in the House of Lords.
Lord Constantine Profile (203KB PDF)
Learie Constantine was born on 21 September 1901. He played test cricket for the West Indies and spent his first-class cricket career playing in England. Following his retirement from the game, Constantine returned to Trinidad, and between 1954 and 1961, he served as a politician in the first Trinidad Legislature. He also published his book Colour Bar in 1954, which examined racial prejudice and discrimination on a worldwide basis.
He returned to England when he was appointed as the first High Commissioner for Trinidad and Tobago in London in 1962. He held the post until 1964. He subsequently wrote and broadcast on cricket, became a governor of the BBC and became a member of the Race Relations Board. He was knighted in 1962 and became rector of St Andrews University in 1967.
In the New Year’s Honours List in 1969, it was announced that Sir Learie Constantine was to be awarded a life peerage. On appointment, he became the first person of non-European descent to be awarded a life peerage. Constantine was introduced in the House of Lords on 26 March 1969, and delivered his maiden speech on 10 March 1971. Lord Constantine did not speak again in the House before his death four months later, on 1 July 1971. He was aged 69 years old. A state funeral took place on 8 July 1971 at Aroica cemetery in Trinidad. He was posthumously awarded the Trinity Cross and there was a memorial service at Westminster Abbey.
Lord Constantine Profile (203KB PDF)
This page provides interactive data on the current membership of the House of Lords.
Prorogation is the mechanism by which parliamentary sessions are ended. This House of Lords Library briefing sets out the start and end dates of each parliamentary session since 1900, together with the number of calendar days between the end of the previous session and the start of the new one.
This House of Lords Library briefing provides a list of movers and seconders of the humble address to the sovereign, following the sovereign’s speech at the State Opening of Parliament. The list provides information from 1979 to 2026.