Herbert Blaize Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
Herbert Augustus Blaize
Order:6th Prime Minister of Grenada
Governor General:Paul Scoon
Deputy:Ben Jones
Term Start:4 December 1984
Term End:19 December 1989
Predecessor:Nicholas Brathwaite
Successor:Ben Jones
Constituency Mp2:Carriacou and Petite Martinique
Predecessor2:Hon. Frederick B Paterson
Successor2:Hon. Nicholas Brathwaite
Term Start2:1957
Term End2:19 December 1989
Office3:Premier of Grenada
Term Start3:3 March 1967
Term End3:25 August 1967
Monarch3:Elizabeth II
Predecessor3:Premier established
Successor3:Eric Matthew Gairy
Office4:Chief Minister of Grenada
Term Start4:September 1962
Term End4:March 1967
Monarch4:Elizabeth II
Predecessor4:Eric Matthew Gairy
Successor4:Chief Minister abolished
Office5:Chief Minister of Grenada
Term Start5:January 1960
Term End5:March 1961
Monarch5:Elizabeth II
Predecessor5:Chief Minister established
Successor5:George E. D. Clyne
Birth Date:26 February 1918
Birth Place:Beausejour, Carriacou, Grenada
Death Place:St George's, Grenada
Spouse:Dame Venetia Blaize
Children:6
Nationality:Carriacouan
Party:Grenada National Party
New National Party
National Party

Herbert Augustus Blaize PC (26 February 1918  - 19 December 1989) was a Grenadian politician and leader of the Grenada National Party. When Grenada was still a British Crown Colony he served as the first Chief Minister from 1960 to 1961, and again from 1962 to 1967. He became the first Premier of the autonomous Associated State of Grenada briefly in 1967. In the first elections following the 1983 coups and the American-led invasion of Grenada, he served as Prime Minister from 1984 until his death in 1989.

Early years

Blaize was born in the island of Carriacou, which along with the island of Petite Martinique is a part of Grenada. He moved to Aruba where he worked many years in the oil refinery of the Lago Oil and Transport Company.[1]

Grenada National Party

In 1953 he formed the Grenada National Party as a rival party to the Grenada United Labour Party of Eric Gairy, who would be Blaize's main political rival for the next 25 years. Blaize entered the legislature in 1957 and became Minister of Trade and Production.

Chief Minister and Premier

He was appointed as Chief Minister in 1960 and held the additional portfolio of finance.[2] He lost power to Gairy in 1961, and was reappointed in 1962 after Gairy was dismissed. In 1967 Grenada became an associated state within the British Empire, gaining more internal self-government.He was the Leader of the Opposition in the House of Representatives of Grenada from 1974 to 1976.[3]

In Opposition

In 1976 Blaize's center-right National Party joined forces with the left-wing New Jewel Movement led by Maurice Bishop for the elections that year, which Gairy and the GULP won. The alliance between Blaize and Bishop ended by 1979 when Bishop seized power. Blaize retired from politics and moved back to Carriacou, until after the intervention by the United States in 1983.

Prime Minister

During the election campaign of 1984, Blaize merged his parties with several other center-right parties to form the New National Party, which took 14 of 15 seats in the election.

In addition to being Prime Minister, Blaize became Minister of Home Affairs, Security, Information, Finance, Trade, Planning, Industrial Development and Carriacou and Petite Martinique Affairs.[4]

Blaize's government advocated a strong economic and military alliance for Grenada with the United States, and other overseas investment.

Death

He died in December 1989 near St. George's, Grenada, following a several-years-long battle with prostate cancer, aged 71. Two days before his death, Blaize had been elected the first party leader of the newly formed National Party.

Family

Herbert Blaize was survived by his wife, Dame Venetia Blaize, DBE (née Venetia Ursula Davidson); three daughters, Norma Blaize (a former Consul-General of Grenada in New York), Carol Jerome and Marion Fleary; three sons, Samuel Blaize, Marvin Blaize and Christopher Blaize. He was also survived by a sister, Muriel Noel.[5] [6]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=KBDDD02:000213952:mpeg21:a0069 Oud-ingezetenen Aruba succesvol in politiek
  2. Web site: Herbert Blaize Biography blaizeha.html. www.thegrenadarevolutiononline.com.
  3. Web site: Opposition Leaders - Grenada Parliament . grenadaparliament.gd.
  4. "January 1985 – General election and resumption of Parliament – Formation of Blaize government – Foreign relations Opening of airport – Start of murder trial", Keesing's Record of World Events, volume 31, January 1985, Grenada, page 33,327.
  5. https://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/20/obituaries/herbert-blaize-71-grenada-chief-who-won-vote-after-the-invasion.html New York Times obituary for Herbert Blaize
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=XXun934ThxwC&dq=Venetia+Blaize+Grenada&pg=PA79 Ebony magazine article on Blaize family