Norman Agnew Explained

Norman Agnew
Office:Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for Belfast East
Term Start:1973
Term End:1974
Birth Date:April 1905
Birth Place:Belfast, Northern Ireland
Party:Unionist Party of Northern Ireland (from 1974)
UUP (until 1974)

Norman Agnew (April 1905 – ?) was a Northern Irish unionist politician.

Background

Born in Belfast, Agnew studied at Belfast Municipal College of Technology, Queen's University Belfast and Trinity College Dublin. He began working as a draughtsman aged 15, but soon moved into management, then, in 1933, to the Ministry of Finance, and in 1946 to the Belfast Corporation. At the Corporation, he initially worked in estates, but then for the city's Water Commissioners, of whom he was Secretary from 1952 to 1973.[1] He was also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Health.[2]

On retirement, Agnew stood for the Ulster Unionist Party in the Northern Ireland Assembly election in 1973, and was elected in Belfast East. In 1975, he stood for the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention, on this occasion for the Unionist Party of Northern Ireland, but was not successful. He also stood in the Westminster seat of Belfast East at the 1979 UK general election, but took fourth place, with only 4% of the votes cast.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Ted Nealon, Ireland: a parliamentary directory, 1973–1974, p.189
  2. The Times Guide to the House of Commons: 1979, p.47
  3. http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/ceb.htm East Belfast 1973–82