Rudy Sternberg

Rudy Sternberg, Baron Plurenden (17 April 1917 5 January 1978) was an Austro-British industrialist and farmer.[1]

Early life

Sternberg was born in Thorn, Germany and educated at the Johanns Gymnasium in Breslau, Germany. He moved to England in 1937, to study chemical engineering at the London University. Following the outbreak of war with Germany, Sternberg remained in England as a refugee from Hitler's persecution of the Jews. He joined the British Army in 1939, and was demobilised in 1943 on health grounds. In 1945, he became a naturalised British subject.[2]

Career

In 1948, he founded the Sterling Group to manufacture Bakelite in a disused cotton mill in Stalybridge, Cheshire. The Sterling Group went on to become one of Britain's largest manufacturers of plastics and resins. He also founded Dominion Exports, an import export company and acquired Plurenden Manor, a farming estate in Woodchurch, Kent.[2]

Sternberg was knighted in the 1970 New Year Honours List,[3] and created a life peer on 28 January 1975 as Baron Plurenden, of Plurenden Manor in the County of Kent.[4]

Personal life

In 1951, Sternberg married Dorothée Monica Prust, a former dancer with the Royal Ballet, who bore him two daughters, Roseanne and Francesca.[1][2]

Sternberg collapsed and died at Tenerife Airport on 5 January 1978, while returning from holiday.[1]

Titles and Style

  • 17 April 1917 - 1 January 1970 - Rudy Sternberg
  • 1 January 1970 -5 January 1978 - Sir Rudy Sternberg
  • 28 January 1975 – 5 January 1978 -Rt Hon. Lord Plurenden
gollark: my age is negative zero point four four four four seven nine picoaeons.
gollark: yes.
gollark: We could provide some kind of encoding for regular stuff in unprintables.
gollark: Maybe make it '' (the empty string).
gollark: The language name should be unprintable too in some weird way.

References

  1. Ian Waller, ‘Sternberg, Rudy, Baron Plurenden (1917–1978)’, rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 31 Dec 2013
  2. http://rudysternberg.co.uk/
  3. "No. 45059". The London Gazette. 13 March 1970. p. 3039.
  4. "No. 46481". The London Gazette. 31 January 1975. p. 1427.
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