Everything about Hugh Shearer totally explained
Hugh Lawson Shearer,
ON,
OJ,PC,LLD (Hon), (
May 18,
1923 –
July 5,
2004) was the third
Prime Minister of Jamaica, from
1967 to
1972.
Born in Martha Brae,
Trelawny Parish,
Jamaica, near the
sugar and
banana growing areas, Shearer attended St Simon's College after winning a parish scholarship to the school.
In
1941 he took a job on the staff of a weekly
trade union newspaper, the
Jamaican Worker. His first political promotion came in
1943, when Sir
Alexander Bustamante (founder of the
Jamaican Labour Party) took over editorship of the paper and took Shearer under his wing. Shearer continued to get promotion after promotion within the union and acquired a Government Trade Union scholarship in
1947.
He was appointed Island Supervisor of Bustamante's trade union, BITU, and shortly afterwards elected Vice President of the union.
Shearer was elected to the
House of Representatives of Jamaica as member for Western
Kingston in
1955, an office he retained for the next four years until he was defeated in the
1959 elections.
He was a member of the Senate from
1962 to 1967, at the same time filling the role of Jamaica's chief spokesman on foreign affairs as Deputy Chief of Mission at the
United Nations. In 1967 he was elected as member for Southern
Clarendon and, after the death of Sir
Donald Sangster, appointed Prime Minister on
April 11, 1967.
Thanks to his work with the
Jamaican Worker earlier in his life, Shearer managed to stay on generally good terms with the Jamaican
working class, and was generally well liked by the populace. However, he did cause an outcry of anger in October of
1968 when his government banned the historian,
Walter Rodney from re-entering the country. On
October 16 a series of riots, known as the
Rodney Riots broke out, after peaceful protest by students from the
University of the West Indies campus at Mona, was suppressed by police; rioting spreading throughout Kingston. Shearer stood by the ban claiming that Rodney was a danger to Jamaica, citing his socialist ties, trips to
Cuba and the
USSR, as well as his radical
Black nationalism.
Shearer was generally uncomfortable with notions of
pan-Africanism or militant black nationalism. He was also insecure about the stability of newly independent Jamaica in the late 1960s.
His term as Prime Minister was a prosperous one for Jamaica, with three new
alumina refineries were built, along with three large
tourist resorts. These six buildings formed the basis of Jamaica's mining and tourism industries, the two biggest earners for the country.
Shearer's term was also marked by a great upswing in secondary school enrollment after an intense education campaign on his part. Fifty new schools were constructed.
It was by pressure from Shearer that the
Law of the Sea Authority chose Kingston to house its headquarters.
In the 1972 elections, the JLP was defeated and the
People's National Party leader,
Michael Manley, became Prime Minister. Between 1980 and 1989, during the prime ministership of
Edward Seaga, who had succeeded him as leader of the JLP in 1974, Shearer was deputy prime minister and minister of foreign affairs.
He died at his home in Kingston on
July 5,
2004, at the age of 81. The Most. Honorable Hugh Lawson Shearer was survived by his wife, the Most Hon. Dr. Denise Eldemire Shearer, sons Corey Alexander, Howard, and Lance,and daughters Hope, Hillary, Mischka Garel, and Heather.
Sources
- Neita, Hartley 2005. Hugh Shearer; A Voice for the People. Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers
, The Institute of Jamaica.
- Senior, Olive 2003. Encyclopaedia of Jamaican Heritage.
image ref: http://www.jis.gov.jm/special%5Fsections/Shearer/
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