Olive Gibbs

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Olive Frances Gibbs,

anti-nuclear
weapons campaigner.

Gibbs entered

Lord Mayor of Oxford (the first was Florence Kathleen Lower). She served as Lord Mayor twice, in 1974โ€“75 and 1981โ€“82, stepping in the second time to replace a colleague who had died halfway through his term. She was also the first woman to chair Oxfordshire County Council
. Her husband, Edmund (accountant and founder of an eponymous Oxfordshire firm) was also a councillor for some time.

Gibbs chaired the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament between 1964 and 1967. She was made an Honorary Freeman both of the City of Oxford and of the City of London. She was awarded

Deputy Lieutenant
of Oxfordshire. Gibbs Crescent, a new street of social housing, was named after her, as was the Humanities building at Oxford Brookes (then Oxford Polytechnic).

A blue plaque to Olive Gibbs was unveiled on her childhood home at Christ Church Old Buildings, St Thomas's, Oxford on 11 April 2015.

An oil portrait of Gibbs by P.G. Rose is held by Oxford Brookes University, and reproduced in the Art UK catalogue.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Olive Gibbs". The Herald. 29 September 1995.

External links

Preceded by
Canon John Collins
Chair of CND

1964–1967
Succeeded by