Arthur Strauss was born Issidor Arthur Strauss on 29 April 1847 in Mayence , Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. He was the son of Samuel Strauss, a merchant, and Rosalia Drucker.
Siblings
Strauss had two brothers: Heinrich Alphons Strauss and Sigmund Ferdinand Strauss. Strauss lived together with his elder brother Heinrich, at 91 St George's Square, Pimlico, London, until his marriage.
Education
He was educated at a German university where he took first prizes in mathematics, Latin and Greek.
Naturalisation
In 1884, while living at 91 St. George's Square, London, he became a naturalised British citizen and modified his name to Arthur Isidor Strauss, making his middle name 'Isador'.
Marriage
At the age of 46, Arthur Strauss married 29-year-old Minna Cohen on 3 June 1893 at the Register Office in the District of St. George's Square, Pimlico, London.
Strauss and his brother Heinrich Alphons were both tin and copper merchants and ran a highly successful metals business called A. Strauss & Co, situated at 16 Rood Lane, EC3, London.
Political career
General Election 1892
In the General Election of 1892, Strauss, a Liberal Unionist, lost to Charles Augustus Vansittart Conybeare by 438 votes in the battle for the Camborne constituency of Cornwall.
At the 1906 general election, he was selected to stand as the Conservative candidate in Paddington North, where the sitting Conservative MPSir John Aird was retiring and the local Conservative Association had found difficulty in selecting a candidate. However, his selection proved controversial, because Strauss was Jewish and the Liberal Party candidate Leo Chiozza Money was Italian, and a committee of objectors to "foreign" candidates was formed which persuaded Sir Henry Burdett to run as an Independent Unionist candidate. Although the constituency had at times been marginal, Paddington North had been held by a Conservative since its creation in 1885, but the split Unionist vote allowed Money to win the seat for the Liberals.
Strauss was selected again to contest Paddington North at the 1910 election, and faced a repeat of the previous opposition. However, the dissident 'League of Patriotic Electors of North Paddington' decided in the end not field a candidate, and at the general election in January 1910, Strauss won the seat, having campaigned on tariff reform. He was re-elected in December 1910.
General Election 1918
At the 1918 General Election, Strauss stood as an "Independent Labour" candidate and lost both the seat and his deposit, winning only 4.5% of the votes. He subsequently joined the Labour Party, but although he did not return to Parliament, his son George also joined Labour and was an MP for 46 years, eventually becoming Father of the House in the 1970s and then a life peer.