Dick Rapley Explained

Dick Rapley
Office1:Member of the Legislative Assembly
Term1:1963–1965
Predecessor1:Les Bailey
Successor1:Seat abolished
Constituency1:European
Birth Date:1918
Birth Place:New Zealand
Death Date:10 July 1972
Death Place:Manila, Philippines

Richard Warwick Rapley (1918 – 10 July 1972) was a New Zealand-born businessman and politician in the Cook Islands. He served as a member of the Legislative Assembly between 1963 and 1965.

Biography

Born in New Zealand, Rapley arrived in the Cook Islands to run a citrus plantation at Titikaveka,[1] later representing the Cook Islands in negotiations with New Zealand over fruit prices.[2] He subsequently sold the plantation and started a taxi and hire car business named Ace Taxis, as well as opening the first motel on Rarotonga.[1]

In 1963 he was elected to the Legislative Assembly from the European constituency, replacing Les Bailey.[3] The European constituency was abolished prior to the 1965 elections, in which Rapley unsuccessfully ran in the four-seat Te-au-o-Tonga constituency as an Independent Group candidate, finishing sixth out of nineteen candidates.[4]

In 1969 he became the first chairman of the Cook Islands Tourist Authority. However, the following year he returned to New Zealand for medical treatment, after which he travelled around East Asia for several months.[1] He died in Manila in 1972.[1]

Notes and References

  1. "Mr R.W. Rapley", Pacific Islands Monthly, September 1973, p131
  2. David J. Stone (1971) Self rule in the Cook Islands: The government and politics of a new micro-state
  3. Pacific Islands Year Book 1963, p139
  4. https://undocs.org/pdf?symbol=en/A/5962 Report of the United Nations Representative for the Supervision of the Elections in the Cook Islands