Hugh T. Barrie

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Hugh T. Barrie
Member of Parliament
for North Londonderry
In office
4 March 1919 – 1922
Preceded byHugh Anderson
Succeeded bySir Malcolm Macnaghten
Member of Parliament
for North Londonderry
In office
1906–1918
Preceded byJohn Atkinson
Succeeded byHugh Anderson
Personal details
Born
Hugh Thom Barrie

(1860-08-06)6 August 1860
Glasgow, Scotland
Died18 April 1922(1922-04-18) (aged 61)
Political partyIrish Unionist Party, Ulster Unionist Party
OccupationBusinessman, politician

Hugh Thom Barrie

Irish Home Rule.[3]

Business and family life

Barrie was born in Glasgow to William Barrie and came to Coleraine in 1879. He worked in an agricultural export business and took it over in 1894.[4]

In 1892 Barrie married Katherine Quarry, daughter of W. H. Quarry of the

Presbyterian. They had three sons and one daughter,[2] including Sir Walter Barrie (1901–1988), a chairman of the Chartered Insurance Institute and Lloyd's of London.[5]

Politics

Barrie was a Coleraine

urban district councillor from 1899, chairing the council for several years.[6] He was a prominent Freemason and Orangeman and supported women's suffrage. He was elected to Westminster in 1906 and retained his seat in January 1910 and December 1910. He promoted the Ulster Covenant and led the Ulster unionist delegation at the 1917–18 Irish Convention.[7] In 1918 he was High Sheriff of County Londonderry and lest this be considered an office of profit disqualifying him from the Commons he did not stand in the December 1918 election. Hugh Anderson, Barrie's election agent, was elected in his stead, standing down in February 1919, with Barrie regaining his seat in the ensuing by-election
on 4 March.

Barrie was Vice-President of the Irish

Right Honourable". He was also a member of the Senate of Northern Ireland
.

References

  • Obituary, The Times, 19 April 1922
  • Callan, Aaron (2019). "H.T. Barrie—the forgotten man of Ulster politics?". History Ireland. 27 (2): 28–31.
    JSTOR 26853007
    .
  • Hughes, Kyle (2013). Scots in Victorian and Edwardian Belfast: A Study in Elite Migration. Edinburgh University Press. p. 194. .

Citations

  1. ^ Debrett's House of Commons. London: Dean. 1916. p. 12.
  2. ^ a b c "Privy Counsellors, Knights, etc.". Dod's Peerage. London. 1923. p. 57.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Callan 2019 p.31
  4. ^ Hughes 2013 p.194
  5. ^ "Barrie Knighted". The Weekly Underwriter. 178: 396. 8 February 1958.; "Sir Walter Barrie by Howard Coster". Collection. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Ireland". The Times. No. 36938. London. 29 November 1902. p. 9.
  7. ^ Hughes 2013 p.146; Northern Ireland Public Record Office (1973). Irish Unionism, 1885–1923: A Documentary History. Belfast: HMSO. pp. 420–424.

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Member of Parliament for North Londonderry
19061918
Succeeded by
Hugh Alfred Anderson
Preceded by
Hugh Alfred Anderson
Member of Parliament for North Londonderry
19191922
Succeeded by
Malcolm Martin Macnaghten