Will Glendinning Explained

Will Glendinning
Office:Member of
Belfast City Council
Constituency:Lower Falls
Term Start:15 May 1985
Term End:1987
Predecessor:District created
Successor:Fra McCann
Constituency1:Belfast Area F
Term Start1:18 May 1977
Term End1:15 May 1985
Predecessor1:Thomas Murphy
Successor1:District abolished
Office2:Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for West Belfast
Term Start2:20 October 1982
Term End2:1986
Birth Place:Portadown, Northern Ireland
Party:Alliance Party

Will Glendinning is a former Northern Irish politician.

Background

He was born in Portadown, the brother of Robin, and a great-grandchild of Robert Glendinning.[1] Glendinning attended Rockport School in Holywood, Co Down.[2]

Glendinning joined the Ulster Defence Regiment in the early 1970s and served in Armagh. In 1977, he was elected as an Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (APNI) councillor for Belfast Area F, which covered the Lower Falls, Donegall Road and Markets areas. He held his seat in 1981,[3] and was also narrowly elected at the 1982 Northern Ireland Assembly election for West Belfast.[4]

"Area F" was abolished in 1985 but Glendinning won a council seat in the Lower Falls Electoral Area,[5] with his wife Pip succeeding in gaining a seat for APNI in the adjacent Upper Falls Area. He and his wife both resigned their council seats in 1987 due to the birth of their daughter.

He became the Chief Executive of the Community Relations Council, before becoming a consultant on "cultural diversity, community relations and transition from conflict" establishing the peace-building charity Diversity Challenges. He has served as Coordinator since 2002[6] Diversity Challenges worked with culturally specific groups including the Loyal Orders Bands, the GAA, and others to promote change to recognise the increasing cultural diversity.[7] He was chairperson of the Northern Ireland Asscoation of Citizens Advice Bureaux in the 1990s. He also served on the board of Community Technical Aid. He served on the board and was chairperson of Newry and Mourne CAB until its merger with Down CABThorufg Diversity Challenges. He is on the Erupopen Board of the International Coalition of the Sites of Conscience(https://www.sitesofconscience.org/en/home/)

Notes and References

  1. John Stanley Bull, British and Irish dramatists since World War II, pp. 73–74
  2. Web site: Rockport School . Rockport.School.com . 23 March 2023.
  3. http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/73-81lgbelfast.htm Local Government Elections 1973–1981: Belfast
  4. http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/cwb.htm West Belfast 1973–82
  5. http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/85-89lgbelfast.htm Local Government Elections 1985–1989: Belfast
  6. http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/victims/docs/healremember02.pdf The Report of the Healing Through Remembering Project
  7. ""Ex-Alliance man to polish Orange image", Irish Times, 21 March 2002.