Richard Harper

Alderman Sir Richard Stephenson Harper, JP (30 December 1902 – 16 November 1973) was an English local politician.

Biography

Harper was born on 30 December 1902, the only son of Alderman Richard S. Harper, JP, of Harnham House, Slade Lane, Manchester, and his wife, Edith C. Harper, also a JP.[1] The family had a long tradition of public service in Manchester, one of his ancestors being a founder of Manchester and Salford Co-operatve Society, while his grandfather was secretary of the Cobden Liberal Club in Lower Broughton and his father was a long-serving member of Manchester City Council.[2] He attended Manchester and Chorlton-cum-Hardy Grammar Schools, before studying at Bonar Law College in Hertfordshire.[1]

In business, he worked in electrical and general engineering from 1920 to 1925 (he was later director of the Manchester Ship Canal Company), when he became Private Secretary to his father. In 1932, he was elected onto Manchester City Council, serving until 1951, when he was elevated to the Aldermanic bench.[1] He was Lord Mayor for the year 1954–55 and led the Conservative Group on the Council for eight years. He also contested the Exchange seat for the Conservatives in the 1950 general election and was a justice of the peace for Manchester from 1949. According to The Guardian, Harper was "an expert on local government and housing".[2] He was knighted in 1958 and was made an honorary freeman of Manchester in 1973. He died on 16 November 1973, leaving a son and a widow, his wife Lily, the only daughter of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Walker of Manchester.[1]

gollark: The UK appears to be doing worryingly little and is not doing well on testing.
gollark: http://www.hpmor.com/
gollark: Yes, this reddit post puts it at 644000, which is less bad.
gollark: ... didn't you say you were reading it *yesterday* or something? I'm pretty sure it's a million words or something.
gollark: Most of the planes I've been on have only had "normal" seating as far as I could tell. Those have mostly been shortish journeys around Europe, so that might be why.

References

  1. "Harper, Sir Richard Stephenson", Who Was Who (online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007). Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  2. "Sir Richard Harper", The Guardian, 19 November 1973, p. 7.
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