Merlyn Rees
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The Right Honourable Merlyn Rees, later Merlyn Merlyn-Rees, Baron Merlyn-Rees, PC (December 18, 1920 – January 5, 2006) was a British Labour party Member of Parliament from 1963 until 1992. In that year, he was created a life peer and entered the House of Lords (changing his name by deed poll to Merlyn Merlyn-Rees in order to be known as Lord Merlyn-Rees) (see [1]).
Born at Cilfynydd, near Pontypridd, South Wales, and educated at Harrow Weald Grammar School, and Goldsmiths College where he was president of the Students' union from 1939 to 1941. He served in the RAF Nottingham University Air Squadron during World War Two, becoming a squadron leader at 25. He attended the London School of Economics where he received BSc(Econ) and MSc(Econ) and. He was appointed schoolmaster at his old school in Harrow in 1949, teaching economics and history. He taught for eleven years, during which time he was three times an unsuccessful parliamentary candidate for Harrow East. He was a member of the Institute of Education at the University of London from 1959 to 1962.
At 1963, he stood successfully as the Labour candidate for Leeds South holding the seat until he stepped down from the House of Commons in 1992. The constituency was renamed as Leeds, South and Morley in 1979.He was Secretary of State for Northern Ireland from March 1974 until September 1976, when he moved back to London to become Home Secretary. For two years before the Labour government came to power in 1974 he had been Labour Party spokesman on Northern Ireland.Rees wrote of his views on Northern Ireland in: Northern Ireland: a Personal Perspective ( Methuen, London, 1985ISBN 0413525902 ).
He was president of the Video Standards Council from 1990 and the first Chancellor of the University of Glamorgan from 1994 to 2002.
He suffered injuries in a number of falls, and failing to recover from these, fell into a coma, dying at the age of 85. He was survived by his wife Colleen and three sons.
Sources
- BBC News (5 Jan. 2006). “Peer's roots in 'gifted' street”. Retrieved Jan. 15, 2006.
- ”Belfast years remembered for vacillation in face of loyalist strike.” (5 Jan. 2006). The Irish Times p14.
- Wakefieldtoday.co.uk.”Your Online Guide to Yorkshire People”. Retrieved Jan. 15, 2006
External links
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