- Dehra Parker
-
The Right Honourable
Dame Dehra S. Parker
DBE, GBEDame Dehra skiing with her grandson, James Chichester-Clark, in Switzerland, 1931 Parliamentary Secretary to the
Ministry of EducationIn office
1937–1944Minister of Health and Local Government in the
Executive Committee of the Privy Council of Northern IrelandIn office
1949–1957Member of the
Northern Ireland House of CommonsIn office
1921–1929Constituency Londonderry Member of the
Northern Ireland House of CommonsIn office
1933–1960Constituency South Londonderry Personal details Born 13 August 1882
Dehra Dun, IndiaDied 30 November 1963 (aged 81)
Shanemullagh House, CastledawsonPolitical party Ulster Unionist Party Spouse(s) Robert Chichester
Admiral Henry ParkerChildren Marion Caroline Dehra Chichester and Robert James Spencer Chichester Religion Church of Ireland Dame Dehra S. Parker, GBE, PC (NI) (13 August 1882 [1] - 30 November 1963) was the longest serving woman MP in the Northern Ireland House of Commons.
Contents
Family life
Dehra Kerr-Fisher was born in a military hospital in Dehra Dun, north of Delhi, India, in 1882, the daughter of James Kerr-Fisher of Kilrea, County Londonderry[2]. She was educated in America, where her father held extensive property holdings, and in Germany [3]. The surname has been spelled, alternatively as Ker-Fisher or Ker Fisher.[4]
Marriages
She was married on two occasions, firstly to Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Peel Dawson Spencer Chichester, MP[2] (d. 1921) with whom she had one son and one daughter[3], both of whom predeceased her.
She married, secondly, Admiral Henry Wise Parker (CB, CMG) on 4 June 1928.[5]
Political career
Dame Dehra was first elected as a Member of Parliament for Londonderry, as Dehra Chichester (which she was known as prior to her second marriage in 1928), in the Northern Ireland general election, 1921. She stood down at the 1929 election but was again elected in the 1933 election for the South Londonderry constituency following the death of her son-in-law James Lenox-Conyngham Chichester-Clark, and served until her resignation on 15 June 1960. Her grandson, James Chichester-Clark, was elected unopposed at the subsequent by-election.
From her re-election in 1933 until her retirement in 1960, Dame Dehra faced opposition only once. During the 1949 Northern Ireland General Election, with anti-partition agitation a common theme across the region, she was opposed in South Londonderry by a Nationalist Party candidate, T.B. Agnew, whom she defeated.
She was a Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education from 1 December 1937 to 15 March 1944. Dame Dehra was also Chair of the Northern Ireland General Health Services Board from 1948 to 1949. She served as Minster of Health and Local Government from 26 August 1949 to 13 March 1957 and became a member of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland in 1949.
She was promoted to be a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1949 Birthday honours "for public services", having previously been awarded the OBE.[6]
Her promotion to the Cabinet under Viscount Brookeborough was part of his reforming premiership; his predecessor having been criticised for appointing very elderly members to Cabinet. She was the first woman to serve in the Northern Ireland Cabinet.
Extra-Parliamentary activities
Outside of parliamentary activities Dame Dehra was a long-serving local councillor on Magherafelt rural district council, president of both the Northern Ireland Physical Training Association and the Girls' Training Corps, chairman of the Ancient Monuments Advisory Committee, and chairman and later president of the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts in the province.
Later life
She died at her home, Shanemullagh House, Castledawson, County Londonderry, on 28 November 1963, aged 81. She was interred two days later in the grounds of Christ Church, Castledawson.
References
- ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ^ a b The Stormont Papers
- ^ a b Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ^ Peerage.com
- ^ Biographies of Members of the Northern Ireland House of Commons
- ^ http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/38628/supplements/2802
Parliament of Northern Ireland Preceded by
position createdMember of Parliament for Londonderry
1921 - 1929Succeeded by
constituency splitPreceded by
James Lenox-Conyngham Chichester-ClarkMember of Parliament for South Londonderry
1933 - 1960Succeeded by
James Chichester-ClarkPolitical offices Preceded by
William GrantMinister of Health and Local Government
1949–1957Succeeded by
Jack AndrewsCategories:- 1882 births
- 1963 deaths
- Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- Dames Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1921–1925
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1925–1929
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1933–1938
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1938–1945
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1945–1949
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1949–1953
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1953–1958
- Members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland 1958–1962
- Members of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland
- Female members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland
- People from Dehradun
- People from County Londonderry
- Ulster Unionist Party politicians
- Chichester family
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