Claude Moss Leigh

Claude Moss Leigh (17 May 1888 – 19 January 1964) was a pioneer of social housing in the United Kingdom and the founder of MEPC plc, one of the United Kingdom's largest property companies.

Career

The son of London surveyor, Claude Leigh initially joined his father's business before venturing out on his own providing quality housing for working class people.[1]

Leigh was a pioneer of social housing who in 1929 established the Metropolitan Housing Corporation to provide rented accommodation in London.[1] By 1937 he was attracting attention because of the large number of blocks of residential accommodation he was buying up.[2]

In 1946, following the introduction of rent controls, Leigh focussed on commercial property and merged his business with several others to form the Metropolitan Estates & Property Corporation.[1] He expanded this business into one of the United Kingdom's largest property concerns.[1]

Leigh was also keen on horse racing and owned racehorses:[3] he acquired the famous racecourse, Star Kingdom, in 1949.[4]

He died in January 1964 at Montego Bay in Jamaica.[5]

Mrs. Claude Leigh and Miss Virginia Leigh (Philip Alexius de Laszlo, 1933)

Family

He was married three times - in 1913 to Ester Boss, in 1925 to Myrtle Johnson and in 1945 to Gay Laithwaite.[5]

gollark: I doubt the rate is higher than 60/month.
gollark: I'd probably just breed entirely with celestials (multiclutch) and then either trade them for CB hatchlings or offer them at random for funlolz.
gollark: For golds.
gollark: Also, there's not been any proposed better way which we don't have.
gollark: Yes, and that system is kind of bad too, but *less* bad.

References

  1. MEPC plc at Funding Universe
  2. Claude Leigh Management Hansard, 25 November 1937
  3. Obituary: Michael Allen Daily Telegraph, 12 March 2009
  4. Star Kingdom at Thoroughbred Heritage
  5. Hanson, Michael, A Short History of MEPC, 1991


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.