Yorkshire Post

Tributes to Lord Carrington

Praise for war hero’s years of service that began with Churchill

- STEVE TEALE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Prime Minister Theresa May has led tributes to statesman and war hero Lord Carrington of Upton, who has died at the age of 99.

The last surviving member of Sir Winston Churchill’s post-war government, Peter Carrington famously resigned as Margaret Thatcher’s Foreign Secretary in 1982.

PRIME MINISTER Theresa May has led tributes to statesman and war hero Lord Carrington of Upton, who has died at the age of 99.

The last surviving member of Sir Winston Churchill’s post-war government, Peter Carrington famously resigned as Margaret Thatcher’s Foreign Secretary in 1982 after taking responsibi­lity for the Argentinia­n invasion of the Falkland Islands.

He had previously chaired the Lancaster House talks in 1979 which led to the establishm­ent of the state of Zimbabwe, and later served as secretary-general of Nato from 1984-88.

The Eton-educated hereditary peer was a tank commander in the Grenadier Guards during the Second World War, winning the Military Cross in the North-Western Europe campaign.

He took up his seat in the House of Lords in 1946 and went on to become the oldest and longest-serving member of Parliament’s second chamber.

Mrs May said his death marked “the end of an era and the loss of a statesman who was respected globally for his remarkable lifetime of public service”.

The Prime Minister said: “There can be few people who have served our country for as long, and with such dedication, as Lord Carrington did – from his gallantry as a tank commander in the Second World War, for which he was awarded the Military Cross, to his service in government under two monarchs and six prime ministers, dating back to Winston Churchill.

“He was a much-loved and widely respected member of the House of Lords for nearly eight decades, and served with great honour and integrity in Government as Foreign Secretary, Defence Secretary, Leader of the House of Lords, chairman of the Conservati­ve Party and much more besides.

“These were qualities that he also brought to bear as a highly esteemed secretary-general of Nato – and, in the week of the Nato summit, I know that my fellow leaders will join me in offering our gratitude for his lifetime of service and our deepest condolence­s to his family.” Former PM David Cameron described Lord Carrington as “a lovely man and a great public servant”. “It was a huge honour having him to Chequers and listening to his stories of working with every Conservati­ve leader from Winston Churchill onwards,” said Mr Cameron. “Kindness and brilliance in equal measure; he’ll be deeply missed.” And Sir John Major said he felt “immensely privileged” to have known Carrington. “There are some of whom it is easy to say ‘I was proud to have known him’,” said Sir John. “Peter Carrington was one such. “In war and in peace, he served our country with courage, grace and distinctio­n. He never fell beneath the dignity of his office, yet leavened public life with an irreverent wit that delighted all who worked with him.

“The country has lost one of its greatest post-war statesmen.

Kindness and brilliance in equal measure; he’ll be deeply missed. Former Conservati­ve Prime Minister David Cameron.

“I not only feel proud to have known him, I feel immensely privileged.”

Mrs May’s effective deputy David Lidington, whose Aylesbury constituen­cy in Buckingham­shire includes the Carrington family home at Bledlow, said on Twitter: “Very sorry to learn of the death of my constituen­t Lord Carrington, former Defence and Foreign Secretary & last surviving member of Churchill’s postwar govt.

“His career was given to public service. My deep sympathy to his family.”

Lord Carrington’s death on Monday came on the same day as the resignatio­ns of Boris Johnson and David Davis – the first time two Cabinet Ministers had quit within 24 hours of each other since he and Humphrey Atkins resigned in 1982.

Lord Carrington married Iona McClean and had three children. His wife died in 2009, aged 89.

One of his last acts as a Conservati­ve grandee was to invite Mrs Thatcher to dinner in 1990 and raise the question of her retirement as Prime Minister. He suggested that she should be thinking of doing this at a time of her choosing and with dignity. She was not persuaded. But before the year was ended, she had gone.

Lord Carrington was chancellor of Reading University from 1992 to 1997, chairman of Christies (1988-1993), and chairman of the board of trustees of the V&A Museum (1983-1988).

 ?? PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES/PA. ?? LIFELONG SERVICE: Lord Carrington in November 1963 when he was then a British Conservati­ve Minister without portfolio; with Margaret Thatcher in 1982; meeting US president Ronald Reagan as NATO secretary-general in 1984; inset, at Downing Street in 2009.
PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES/PA. LIFELONG SERVICE: Lord Carrington in November 1963 when he was then a British Conservati­ve Minister without portfolio; with Margaret Thatcher in 1982; meeting US president Ronald Reagan as NATO secretary-general in 1984; inset, at Downing Street in 2009.
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