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Giles Newton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Giles Fendall Newton, MBE (27 May 1891 – 8 April 1974) was an English asbestos executive and businessman.

Family

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Giles Fendall Newton was born on 27 May 1891, the only son of William Latham Newton (1862–1948), of Holtby House, York, and Goldington, Bedford, and his wife, Violet, sixth daughter of Richard Harrison, of Eltofts.[1][2][3] In 1921, he married Mary Cicely (died 1972), elder daughter of Brigadier Sir Frederick Meyrick, 2nd Baronet; they had one son, Michael Anthony Fendall Newton, and one daughter, Gillian Prunella Newton.[1][4][5] The son, Michael, was a director of the Cape Asbestos Company Ltd. and Managing Director of Cape Building Products, and settled at Broadhurst Wood, Balcombe, Sussex.[6][7]

Career

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After schooling at Madgalen College School, Newton went up to Lincoln College, Oxford, as an exhibitioner in 1910 to read history. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1914. He was commissioned into the Queen's Royal West Surrey Regiment in the first year of World War I and eventually served as an adjutant, which saw him appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1918. In 1917, he was transferred to the Ministry of Munitions.[1]

Newton joined the board of the Cape Asbestos Company Ltd as a director in 1933; between 1957 and 1962, he was its chairman and subsequently became its President.[8] He served as Deputy Chairman of the London Chamber of Commerce in 1945, and occupied the chair over the following two years. He was also Deputy Chair (1946) and then Chairman (1948) of the London Court of Arbitration. He occupied Staplefield Court in Staplefield, Sussex, and became that county's High Sheriff for 1946–47.[1][9] He died at his home, 7 Courtenay Gate, Hove, Sussex, on 8 April 1974.[1][4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Newton, Giles Fendall", Who Was Who (online edition), Oxford University Press, 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  2. ^ Marquis de Ruvigny (1911), Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal (Mortimer-Percy vol., part 1), p. 162
  3. ^ For his death, see under "Deaths", The Times, (London), 19 January 1948, p. 1; for Violet's father's name, see "Marriages", Yorkshire Gazette, 20 February 1886, p. 4
  4. ^ a b The Times (London), 9 April 1974, p. 28
  5. ^ Debrett's Baronetage, Knightage, and Companionage, 1931, p. 535
  6. ^ Beerman's Financial Year Book of Southern Africa: Investors' Manual and Cyclopaedia of South African Public Companies, vol. 2 (1966), p. 424 and (1973), p. 447
  7. ^ The Times (London), 3 May 1962, p. 23
  8. ^ "Men in the News", Commercial Motor, 27 July 1962. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  9. ^ London Gazette, 22 March 1946 (issue 37509), p. 1494