[go: nahoru, domu]

Sir Harold Winter Atcherley (30 August 1918 – 29 January 2017) was a businessman, public figure and arts administrator in the United Kingdom.

Sir Harold Atcherley
Born
Harold Winter Atcherley

(1918-08-30)30 August 1918
Holt, Norfolk, England
Died29 January 2017(2017-01-29) (aged 98)
London, England
NationalityBritish
EducationGresham's School
Alma materGeneva University
Heidelberg University
Occupation(s)Businessman, public figure, arts administrator
Spouses
Anita Helen Leslie
(m. 1946; div. 1990)
Elke Jessett
(m. 1990; died 2004)
Sarah Mordant
(m. 2005)
Children4
Parents
  • L. W. Atcherley (father)
  • Maude Lester Nash (mother)
Military career
Service / branch British Army
UnitQueen's Westminster Rifles (1939–1940)
Intelligence Corps (1940)
18th Infantry Division
Battles / warsWorld War II

Early life

edit

The son of L. W. Atcherley and his wife Maude Lester Nash, Atcherley was educated at Gresham's School, Holt, Geneva University, and Heidelberg University.[1]

Career

edit

Atcherley joined Royal Dutch Shell in 1937. From 1939, he served through the Second World War in the Queen's Westminster Rifles (1939–1940) and the Intelligence Corps, 1940, then in the 18th Infantry Division in Singapore. After the fall of Singapore in 1942 he became a prisoner of war of the Japanese and worked on the Burma Railway until the war ended in 1945, then in 1946 he returned to Royal Dutch Shell. With that company he served in Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Argentina, and Brazil until 1959 and was the RDS Group's Personnel co-ordinator from 1964 until 1970.[1][2]

He was Recruitment Advisor to the Ministry of Defence, 1970–1971, and Chairman of Tyzack & Partners, 1979–1985. He was also a director of British Home Stores, 1973–1987. In retirement, as of 2008 he lived in London.[3] Atcherley died on 29 January 2017, aged 98.[4]

Appointments

edit
  • Chairman, Armed Forces' Pay Review Body (1971–1982)[1]
  • Chairman, Police Negotiating Board (1983–1986)[1]
  • Member, Top Salaries Review Body, 1971–1987[1]
  • Chairman, Aldeburgh Festival, 1989–1994 [1]
  • Chairman, Toynbee Hall, 1985–1990 (Member of Management Committee, 1979–1990)[1]
  • Member, National Staff Committee for Nurses and Midwives, 1973–1977[1]
  • Member, Committee of Inquiry into Pay and Related Conditions of Service of Nurses, 1974[1]
  • Member, Committee of Inquiry into Remuneration of Members of Local Authorities, 1977[1]
  • Vice-Chairman, Suffolk Wildlife Trust, 1987–1990[1]
  • Member of Management Committee, Suffolk Rural Housing Association, 1984–1987[1]
  • Chairman, Suffolk and North Essex Branch, European Movement, 1995–1998, and President since 1998[1]

Honours

edit

Family

edit

Atcherley married first, in 1946, Anita Helen Leslie. They had one son and two daughters and divorced in 1990. He married secondly, in 1990, Elke Jessett, the daughter of Carl Langbehn (she died in 2004). He married thirdly, in 2005, Sarah Mordant.[1]

Publications

edit
  • War Diary: Singapore, Siam & Burma, 1941-1945, illustrated by Ronald Searle (London, Harold Atcherley, 2004)
  • Euro paean: In 1998, Atcherley wrote in The Independent in support of Britain joining the European single currency.[5]
  • In the aftermath of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center, Atcherley, writing in The Independent, ascribed the fundamental causes of the disaster to the non-observation by the British government of the Balfour Declaration.[2] He wrote to The Times on 3 August 2006: "How can the Israelis, Bush and Blair think they can ever achieve lasting peace in the Middle East by allowing Israel to continue its futile attempt to 'defeat' Hezbollah? ...Unless military action is replaced by negotiation, I can only see disastrous consequences for our relations with the Muslim world."[6]
  • On 6 September 2001, a letter from Atcherley was published in London's The Independent newspaper, headed Reports of my death... and enquiring why for two years running the newspaper had failed to include his name in its Today's Birthdays column. He suggested:[7]

It occurs to me that it may be because I am dead without being aware of it. This is perhaps too fanciful, if only because, as far as I am aware, my name has not yet appeared in your Deaths section... My own hunch is that my supreme unimportance may have something to do with it.

His birthday, however, has continued to be reported in The Times.[8]

References

edit