Herbert Trustram Eve

Sir Herbert Trustram Eve KBE (18651936) was a noted British expert in real property.[1]

Biography

Born on 4 June 1865, Herbert Trustram Eve was educated at Bedford School.[2] In 1893, he married Fanny Jean Turing, who later became a Conservative Party politician.[3]

In 1904, Eve was appointed as Agricultural Correspondent to the Board of Agriculture. During the First World War he was appointed as Chairman of the Forage Committee at the War Office, which oversaw the requisitioning of foodstuffs for the British Army. In 1920 he was elected as President of the Farmers Club (an office held by both his father and his grandfather). He was an expert in the valuation of real property, was President of the Rating Surveyors Association, and was retained as an expert witness in a number of high-profile compensation cases. He would often appear in court opposite his son, the barrister Malcolm Trustram Eve, 1st Baron Silsoe.[2] He was a frequent contributor to The Times, and his articles included an article in April 1922 entitled "Reduce the Rates", and another in April 1926 on "the Rating Act". He was keenly interested in the preservation of London's "Green Belt".[4]

Sir Herbert Trustram Eve was invested as a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1918. He died in London on 11 November 1936, aged 71.[5]

gollark: Oh, yes, that too.
gollark: Trouble is that ECC stuff in CC currently is... not fast.
gollark: The door lock would then verify that the message was actually signed with the key, and the times are close enough.
gollark: The door lock or whatever would store the public key, the pocket computer the private key, and the pocket computer would constantly broadcast a message containing the current time, signed with its private key.
gollark: Just thinking about it, the most secure way might be a pocket computer sending sender-verified signals based on the current time.

References

  1. "Person Page".
  2. "Malcolm Trustram Eve".
  3. Cheryl Law, Women: A Modern Political Dictionary, p.61
  4. Obituary, The Times, 12 November 1936, p.16
  5. "Who's Who".
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