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Many Old Boys' from the SSGTSFB and Boys' High School
went on to make a particular name for themselves. This section is a list
of those I've been able to research (some come from Who's Who)
... if you know of any more, please get
in touch.
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b:30-Mar-1893 - d:21-Jan-1948 [South
Shields High School] |
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After attending the High School, Albert Allan
went on to be a Traffic Apprentice in the North-East Railway. He eventually
became General Manager of the Sierra Leone Government Railway in 1938 |
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b:13-Jan-1881 [South Shields High
School for Boys] |
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The Barbour name is known world-wide for high
quality waterproof and outdoor clothes, and it was Malcom Barbour's
father, John Barbour, who established the business in South Shields
in 1894. Malcolm went into his father's business when he left school
in 1897 and inherited the company on his father's death in 1918 |
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b:3-Feb-1931 [South Shields High
School for Boys] |
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After being educated at the South Shields High
School for Boys, Dennis Boyd went into National Service at 18, and
worked variously in the Ministry of Defence, Board of Trade and Forestry
Commission. In 1979 he was appointed the Director of Conciliation
at ACAS. |
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b:1-Jan-1894 - d:22-Mar-1971 [Westoe
Road Secondary School] |
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A pupil of Westoe School, George Bridge found
a career in insurance, and eventually became Deputy Chairman of Legal
and General. |
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b:27-Jan-1915 - d: Sep-2003 [Westoe
Secondary School] |
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Jack Brymer was a renowned clarinetist. He started
his career in 1935 as a teacher in Croydon, and taught at Dean Park
and Cleadon Park junior schools. He joined the RAF from 1940 to 1945,
where he served as a physical training instructor. By invitation of
Sir Thomas Beecham, he was appointed principal clarinetist for the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in 1946, where he stayed until 1963 when
he joined the BBC Symphony Orchestra. He became well known, not just
as a musician, but also as a radio presenter. He was Professor at
the Royal Academy of Music from 1950 to 1958, at Kneller Hall (1969-1973)
and Guildhall School of Music and Drama (from 1981). He was awarded
the OBE in 1960. But he wasn't just a classical clarinettist - he
also had a life-long interest in mainstream jazz, having toured and
played as a soloist. |
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.b: c1882 |
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Younger brother of Robert, Frederick Chapman studied medicine at
Durham University. However, his greater claim to fame was as an
English Rugby Football International. He was considered to be the
most talented rugby player of the six Chapman brothers and, like
many rugby players from the school, was also a member of Westoe
Rugby Club. Freddie Chapman also represented Durham University and
Durham County, and later joined Hartlepool Rovers. He is credited
as scoring the first try, the first penalty goal and the first conversion
at the first ever International match at Twickenham Stadium (opened
in 1909) on 15th January, 1910.
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b:3-Mar-1880 - d:31-Jul-1963 [South
Shields High School for Boys] |
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Robert Chapman was the son of Henry Chapman (Chartered Accountant
and prominent businessman in South Shields, born around 1850), and
lived in Woods Terrace, Westoe. Robert was one of seven brothers
who went to the Boys' High School, and came to be School Captain
in 1896. He left to go to London University, where he gained a BA.
When he finished at university, he joined the family's accountancy
firm, and was active in the Durham Artillery volunteers. He bcame
a Captain in 1904 and a Major in 1908, when he commanded the 4th
Durham Howitzer Brigade. But through this, he didn't lose interest
in the school, and before it was taken over by the local authority,
he was one of the governors.
Robert Chapman was called up and fought in the Royal Artillery
in the 1914-18 war, receiving the DSO in 1916. He was made a Colonel
in 1925, and an honorary Colonel of the regiment in 1935.
His life was also bound up in politics, where he was elected to
be one of the first Councillors for the new Harton Ward, in 1921.
And in 1931 became Mayor. In 1931 he became MP for Houghton-le-Spring,
and in 1940 he became High Sheriff of Durham.
His home was Undercliffe, the large house just on the edge of Cleadon
Village which, in the late 60s, became "St Michael's Home of
Healing". And Robert Chapman didn't lose his connections with
the school - he became Chairman of the Board of Governors from around
1927 for 11 years.
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b: 15-Oct-1975 [Harton Comprehensive] |
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Jared Deacon is an international athlete of
some renown. Once part of South Shields Harriers, he moved to Morpeth
Harriers. As a member of Morpeth Harriers he was part of the British
Olympic 4x400m team in Sydney, 2000. In 2002, as part of the 4x400m
relay team, he won gold medals at the European Championships and Commonwealth
Games. He just missed a place on the 2004 Olympics team, but continues
to achieve good times as a 400m runner. |
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b:1942 [South Shields Grammar-Technical
School for Boys] |
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After going to the SSGTSFB, Professor Edwardson
went to Nottingham and then London Universities. He has written numerous
papers on brain biochemistry and in particular on Alzheimer's Disease. |
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b:18-May-1873 - d:26-Nov-1941 [South Shields High School]
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Harry Eltringham was one of the first 37 boys to be taken into
the High School in 1885, although he left less than three years
later, dissatisfied with the education there, and went to Durham
Grammar School instead. He later went to Trinity College Cambridge,
where he rowed in the First Trinity Eight and Four, and in the University
Trials. He became a partner in his father's shipbuilding firm, Jos
T Eltringham & Co, and was later a Director of Manchester
Dry Dock Co. However, his greater claim to fame was as a renowned
entomologist - he was made President of the Royal Entomological
Society of London from 1931 to 1932.
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b:17-Apr-1929 - d:10-Feb-2002 [South Shields High School]
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John Erickson left the Boys' High School in 1946 with an open scholarship
in History at St John's College, Cambridge. He took his place after
a period of national service, and entered the world of academia,
working his way up to Professor. Having learnt Russian whilst at
the High School, he naturally specialised in Russian military and
defence studies. He wrote numerous books on the Soviet military,
and spent several years as a Professor of Politics. He worked at
universities in the USA, and in 1995 was awarded an Honorary Fellowship
at the Ukraine Aerospace Academy. Like many Old Boys, John Erickson
expressed great affection and gratitude for his time at the school
- the Gazette reports "his mentors were legends at the school
and the town, namely Frank Wade, Charlie Constable and Fred Grey".
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b:? - d:15-Aug-1912 |
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Fenwick was an aviator, and he designed the
Mersey monoplane, which was the first plane to be accepted by the
War Office. Unfortunately, during a demonstration, it plunged to the
ground and he was killed. Robert was one of four members of the family
who attended the school. A tablet was placed at the entrance to the
main hall to commemorate his name and achievements. |
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b:1948 |
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John Gray was at the
South Shields Grammar-Technical School for Boys from 1959
to around 1966. He is currently Professor of European Thought
at the London School of Economics. He has written several books,
numerous articles and has appeared on Radio and Television many times.
He has a reputation as an outspoken anti-capitalist - indeed, he controversially
declared that the Al Qaeda attacks in 2001 would be seen as marking
the end of global capitalisation. His titles include "Beyond
the New Right: markets, government and the common environment"
and "False Dawn: the Delusion of Global Capitalisim" - his
most recent book, published in May, 2003, is "Al Qaeda and What
it Means to be Modern". |
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b:8-Nov-1924 - d:15-Sep-1975 [South
Shields High School] |
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Son of Albert Avondale (Tanker) Hall, teacher
at the school. Was also taught at Appleby Grammar School. Served in
RAF from 1943 to 1946, then went on to lecture in law and eventually
became President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1969) |
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b:21-Feb-1916 [South Shields High
School] |
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Entered the Ministry of Labour in 1938, and
worked his way up to Permanent Secretary at the Department of Employment
from 1973 to 1976 |
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b: 5-May-1925 d: 7-Apr-2002
[South Shields High School] |
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Bill Hewison was an
artist and theatrical cartoonist. He was as a cartoonist for Punch
for over thirty years, joining such notables as Thelwell and Ronald
Searle, and was its art editor from 1960 to 1984. Following the demise
of Punch he he worked for The Times, and in his obituary
they referred to him as "the last surviving paractitioner of
a vanishing art". |
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b:23-Apr-1918 [South Shields High
School] |
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In Who's Who, he gave his recreation as "standing in shafts
of moonlight", and this undoubtedly reflected his outlook on
life. He was born on 23rd April, 1918 (although some references
incorrectly have this as 1923, and one has 1919) . His career led
to numerous Professorships of Poetry and English Literature around
the world, and through this time he became a prolific writer. He
is possibly most famous for the poem entitled "The Love that
Dares to Speak its Name" which, in 1976, landed Gay News in
court for blasphemy, and which it is still illegal to publish in
Great Britain.
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b:17-Oct-1896 - d:11-Nov-1970 |
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No, this isn't the Kirwan after whom Kirwan
House was named ... it was actually named after his father, GR Kirwan,
headmaster. Geoffrey Dugdale left school and served in France from
1915 to 1918 in the Artillery. He was involved with the Royal Commission
on Police Powers and Procedure in 1928, and worked in the Ministry
of Home Security from 1939 to 1945, and continued to work in government
offices until 1961, when he became a Vice-President of the Trustee
Savings Bank. GD Kirwan was the instigator of the Kriwan Prize,
by giving the school some money "to provide annual prizes in
perpetuity". |
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b:12?-Mar-1926 - d:Sep-2002 [South
Shields High School] |
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The son of a mayor of South Shields and shipyard worker, James
Mitchell left South Shields High School for Boys and went to Oxford.He
left university with an MA, and moved from job to job, spending
time in a shipyard, travel agency and even the civil service. He
settled down for a while as a a teacher at Jarrow Grammar, having
gained a DipEd at King's College in Newcastle, and also taught at
the Sunderland College of Art. But it is his writing for which he
is best-known, and he wrote his first novel, Here's a Villain,
in 1957. There followed more novels and TV screenplays. In 1967,
he wrote an episode for ABC's Armchair Theatre, called A
Magnum for Mr Schneider, in which the intelligence agent, David
Callan, first appeared - this led to the TV series Callan, which
ran from 1967 to 1972 (but with numerous spin-offs). James Mitchell
also created (and part-wrote) BBC's When the Boat Comes In. [note
that his Date of Birth is given in most references as 12-Mar-1926,
but the official birth index says 16-Mar]
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b: 1879 - d: 8-May-1940 |
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A keen rugby
player, who went on to become Chairman and Managing Director of
John Redhead & Sons, Ltd, his grandfather's ship-building company. |
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b:3-Dec-1939 [South Shields Grammar-Technical
School for Boys] |
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Specialising in photochemistry and lasers, Prof
Phillips became Head of the Department of Chemistry at Imperial College
in 1992. |
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b:4-Aug-1963 [Harton Comprehensive] |
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Pickering joined Sunderland Football Club in 1977 as a "schoolboy
associate". Four years later he signed a professional contract
with the Club where he made his first-team debut against Ipswich
in August, 1981. While with the club he earned a total of 15 England
Youth under-21 caps, and then in 1983 he picked up a cap with the
England team during their tour of Australia. In 1985 he played at
Wembley in the Milk Cup Final, where Sunderland lost 1-0 to Norwich.
He then transferred to Coventry City, playing his his debut match
in 1986 and in 1987 was on the Wembley turf again with Coventry
as they won the FA Cup.
Things went downhill for Pickering after this. He transferred to
Derby County, where he played only four games for them and acquired
the nickname "psycho". Then he signed for Darlington followed
by Burnley, after which he had to retired from the game after seriously
injuring his foot. These days he is part of the sports team for
BBC Local Radio in the North-East.
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b:19-Nov-1870 - d:14-Nov-1949 [South
Shields High School] |
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Runciman was a well-known Old Boy who gave his name (at least for
a while) to one of the school houses and who had a significant political
career.
After leaving school he was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge,
and then joined his father in his ship-building business, Runciman
Shipping Co Ltd (later called Walter Runciman & Co Ltd). He
embarked on a political career - first failing as a candidate for
Gravesend in 1898, but the following year defeating Winston Churchill
to represent Oldham. In 1900, Churchill regained the seat, but in
1902, Runciman was back in the House as MP for Dewsbury. He was
a forceful parliamentarian, and soon found himself appointed Parliamentary
Secretary to the Local Government Board. On becoming Prime Minister
in 1908, Asquith appointed him President of the Board of Education,
and in 1914 he was appointed President of the Board of Trade.
When Asquith was forced to resign as Prime Minister as a result
of the coalition crisis at the end of 1916, Runciman also stood
down. However, he continued in Parliament - failing to be re-elected
in 1918, but becoming MP for Swansea West in 1924 (and then St Ives,
in 1929). Curiously, Runciman's wife, Hilda Stevenson, was also
an MP, and between them they claimed a first in Parliament - they
were the first husband and wife to sit together in the House of
Commons.
After Baldwin gave way to Chamberlain in May, 1937, Runciman retired
as an MP (and also from his second term as President of the Board
of Trade) and moved to the Upper House as Viscount Runciman of Doxford.
In July the following year, he was invited to lead a mission to
Czechoslovakia, where he was to try to persuade the Czechs to accept
the claims of the Sudeten Germans. But these talks failed, and in
August 1938, Chamberlain announced that he would no longer be in
a position to assist the Czechs should they be attacked by the Germans.
Shortly after the failed mission, Runciman was appointed to the
post of Lord President of the (Privy) Council, but following the
outbreak of war, he resigned in ill-health which dogged him until
his death in Doxford, Northumberland, in 1949
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b:6-Jan-1881 - d:14-Feb-1943 [South
Shields High School] |
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Worked in the Indian Educational Service. Director
of Public Instruction, Punjab (1931) |
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b:18-Sep-1911 - d:Mar-1986 [South
Shields High School] |
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Poet and novelist, translator and critic. After
attending South Shields High School, Scarfe went to Durham and then
Cambridge Universities, and then on to the Sorbonne in Paris, where
he wrote surrealist poetry, and "dabbled" in communism.
He lectured in French poetry at the University of Glasgow, and in
1959 became Director of the British Institute in Paris. In his time
in Paris he was made a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres, as
on his retirement was made a Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur. |
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b:30-Dec-1913 - d:1-Mar-1980 [South
Shields High School] |
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Chairman of the Newcastle Labour Part from 1958-1976.
Councillor and JP. Chairman of Tyne & Wear Passenger Authority
in 1973 |
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b:21-Jun-1945 [South Shields Grammar-Technical
School for Boys] |
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Managing Director, Greater Manchester Buses
South Ltd in 1993 |
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b:7-Oct-1905 - d:10-Mar-1976 [Westoe
Secondary School 1916-1922] |
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After leaving school, Robert Spence was educated
at King's College, Durham. He went to to be Commonwealth Fellow at
Princeton University, USA from 1928 to 1931, and then became lecturer
in Physical Chemistry at Leeds University. During WWII he was Chemical
Warfare Adviser to the RA, based in the Middle East, and he then moved
on to be Head of the Chemistry Dvision at the Atomic Energy Research
Establishment at Harwell, where he stayed to eventually become its
Director, in 1964. He left in 1968 to become Professor of Applied
Chemistry and Master of Keynes College at the University of Kent where,
in 1973 until his death, he was Professor Emeritus. |
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b:1-Oct-1933 |
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Director of Research, Institute of Grassland
and Environmental Research at the Agricultural and Food Research Council
until 1993 |
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b:1949 [South Shields Grammar-Technical
School for Boys] |
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After leaving the school, and inspired by his
acting experience with the National Youth Theatre, Paul Thain went
on to read Drama and Theatre Arts at Birmingham University. Although
he went into teaching, he gave this up to become a full-time parent
and playwright. Although he has written a number of stage plays, his
most widely heard scripts have been for radio, and in 1981 his Radio
4 play, "The Biggest Sandcastle in the World", won the Giles
Cooper Award for Best Radio Play. |
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b:18-Aug-1928 [South Shields High
School 1939-1946] |
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David Walker went
straight from South Shields High School to do his National Service
in the Royal Naval Air Service. He gained his degress at the Universities
of Durham and Newcastle. His lifetime in academia has been driven
by a consuming interest in plant life, and through it he has served
at universities in the USA, Durham, Cambridge, London and Sheffield.
He has produced 230 publications, including four books mainly related
to photosynthetic carbon assimilation, and has provided guidance in
plant productivity training courses all over the world. Since 1993
he has been Emeritus Professor of photosynthesis at the University
of Sheffield. |
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b:8-Dec-1892 - d:20-Oct-1976 [South
Shields High School] |
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Knighted in 1954, Sir Eric Weston became a Judge,
and spent most of his career in India, including the Chief Justice
of the Punjab High Court in Simla. |
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b:13-Jul-1947 - 2-Feb-2008[SSGTSFB
1958-1965] |
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Edward Wilson is first mentioned in the ATOM as part of the cast
of the 1960 junior School Play, What Weather!. He played
the part of the Government Minister of Weather, and the review says
"the part ... was taken with a surprising expertise by Edward
Wilson, a boy whose ability augurs well for the future". Little
did the reviewer know that Ed Wilson would eventually become a professional
actor and Artistic Director of the National Youth Theatre. As he
went through is schooldays, Ed Wilson earned great praise for his
roles in the School Plays - Lucy in The Rivals (1961), Truffaldino
in The Servant of Two Masters (1962), Mrs White in The
Monkey's Paw (1963), and Haryrazon in The Miser (1964),
and in his senior years he produced the Lawrenson House plays for
the House Drama Festival. After leaving school, he made a number
of appearances on television, perhaps most notably as Billy Seaton
in When The Boat Comes In by James Mitchell (also an Old
Boy of the school), and in 1987 became Artistic Director of the
National Youth Theatre. His final season with the NYT ended in 2003,
when he went to Holywood to become director of the Los Angeles Young
Actors Company, at the Ivar Theatre. Ed died of cancer in Los Angeles
at the age of 60.
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b:16-Apr-1927 - d:2-Sep-2002 [South
Shields High School] |
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Robert Wilson's father had been a miner all his life, and wanted
more for his son. Although a keen sportsman, he also excelled academically.
After going to Laygate Lane School and South Shields High School
for Boys, he studied for his BSc at Newcastle and then went on to
post-graduate studies at Edinburgh where his doctoral thesis in
1952 was on the optical spectroscopy of O-type stars. Armed with
his doctorate, he joined the staff of the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh.
He quickly became recognised as a formidable scientist in astronomy,
and in 1968 went to the US to become the first non-American to receive
the Presidential Award for Design Excellence from President Reagan.
He was awarded his CBE in 1978, and kinghthood in 1989 for his services
to astronomy. Among his notable activities, he was involved in the
design and operation of the Ultra-Violet Explorer satellite, which
led to major dsicoveries in the field of cosmology, and which continued
to operate some 17 years after its designed life.
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