Enid Hattersley

Enid Hattersley (née Brackenbury; 19 September 1904 – 17 May 2001) was a Labour Party politician from Sheffield, England, who became the city's Lord Mayor in 1981.

Early years

She was born Enid Anne Brackenbury at Shirebrook, Nottinghamshire, the daughter of a coal merchant. She was a Labour Party activist from an early age, securing her membership card at the age of 14. She managed the household for her invalid mother until she married her first husband, a miner named John O'Hara. When she was 27, Father Frederick Hattersley (known as Roy, his second name), a Roman Catholic priest who was possibly from a recusant family, came to order the winter's coal for his presbytery. They fell in love in spite of his clerical vocation.[1]

Marriage

Once widowed when her first husband passed away, Enid O'Hara married Frederick Hattersley. By 1932 they had moved to Sheffield. Their only son would become the noted Labour Party politician, writer and Life Peer Baron Hattersley of Sparkbrook. Frederick Hattersley died in 1973.

Political career

She spent some two decades on Sheffield's Libraries and Arts Committee (as Chair from 1968 to 1980). She also served four years on South Yorkshire County Council and was chairperson of governing Sheffield's first comprehensive school. She oversaw the creation of the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield. In 1979, as chairman of the Yorkshire Museums Service, she helped persuade the fiscally struggling nearby Kirklees council not to sell off artwork by Francis Bacon and Henry Moore.[1] In 1981, she was installed as Lord Mayor of Sheffield.

Falklands War

She would help rally the city when the HMS Sheffield sank during the 1982 Falklands War and she led memorials and fund-raising for the families of those killed and wounded. The Ministry of Defence set up in response its own South Atlantic Fund.[2]

Legacy

She was credited by The Telegraph for her contributions to Sheffield, specifically by helping "turn the city from one of England's grimiest cities into a modern industrial centre …as chairman of the Libraries and Arts Committee, she developed the city's museums and art galleries to the point where they gained an international reputation".[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Enid Hattersley obituary in The Telegraph
  2. Enid Hattersley obituary in The Guardian


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.