James Cameron Tudor Explained

Sir James Cameron Tudor
Honorific-Suffix:KCMG
Office1:Deputy Premier of Barbados
Term Start1:1965
Term End1:November 30 1966
Predecessor1:Office Established
Successor1:Office Abolished
Office2:1st Deputy Prime Minister of Barbados
Term Start2:30 November 1966
Term End2:9 September 1971
Primeminister2:Errol Barrow
Predecessor2:Office Established
Successor2:Cuthbert Edwy Talma
Birth Date:18 October 1919
Birth Place:St. Michael, Barbados
Death Place:Bridgetown, Barbados
Occupation:Politician

Sir James Cameron Tudor, KCMG (18 October 1919 – 9 July 1995[1]) was a Barbadian politician and diplomat, who was a founding member of the country's Democratic Labour Party in 1955. He served on the first Provisional General Council and as the first General Secretary.[2] He served as the first Deputy Prime Minister of Barbados (and previously the only deputy premier of colonial-era Barbados), education minister, high commissioner to Britain, and United Nations ambassador, and was elected to both houses of the national legislature. He also worked as a broadcaster, lecturer and journalist.

Tudor was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1970 New Year Honours, and was promoted to a Knight Commander of the Order in the 1987 list.

Background

Born in St. Michael, Barbados in 1919, Tudor was educated at Harrison College, Barbados, and at Keble College, Oxford, where in 1942 he became the first Black person elected president of the Oxford Union.[3] [4] After receiving a master's degree in history and politics in 1944, he returned to Barbados and taught at Combermere School (1946–48) and in British Guiana at Queens School (1948–51).

He was elected to the Barbados House of Assembly in 1951. He was a founding member in 1955 of the Democratic Labour Party, which assumed power in 1961 and led the former British colony to independence in 1966.

He served as Deputy Prime Minister,[5] twice served as Foreign Minister of Barbados[6] (1971–72, 1986–1989),[1] Education Minister[7] (1961–67),[1] as Barbados' High Commissioner to the United Kingdom[8] (1972–75), and High Commissioner to Canada (1990–1992),[1] and was the Permanent Representative to the United Nations[8] (1976–1979).[1]

He died in hospital in Bridgetown, Barbados, aged 75, following a heart attack.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Index Tj-Tz . rulers.org . 19 July 2016.
  2. Web site: The Party . . 3 December 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120204033621/http://www.dlpbarbadoscanada.com/the-party.html . 4 February 2012 .
  3. Pamela Roberts, Black Oxford: The Untold Stories of Oxford University's Black Scholars, Oxford: Signal Books, 2013.
  4. Web site: Sir Philip Dowson at Univ. September 29, 2021. September 10, 2021.
  5. Book: Foreign Service Journal . 1972 . American Foreign Service Association.
  6. Web site: Foreign ministers A–D . rulers.org . 19 July 2016.
  7. Book: Almanac of Current World Leaders, Vols 10-11 . 1967 . International Academy at Santa Barbara . 13.
  8. News: Obituary: Sir James Cameron Tudor . . 11 July 1995.
  9. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1995/07/12/deaths/b9a98d2f-fa39-4c5c-b54e-446b3b84c7be/ "Sir James C. Tudor"