Charles Mulholland, 4th Baron Dunleath

Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Edward Henry John Mulholland, 4th Baron Dunleath DL (19331993) was a politician in Northern Ireland.

Mulholland studied at Eton College and the University of Cambridge.[1] Mulholland succeeded as Baron Dunleath in 1956 and entered the House of Lords.

As Lord Dunleath, he became a Deputy Lieutenant of County Down and the Lieutenant-Colonel commander of the North Irish Horse in the Territorial Army.[1] He was also interested in vintage motoring.[2] In August 1967, he was appointed to the BBC's Board of Governors, taking over from Richard Pim as Governor for Northern Ireland.[3]

In the early 1970s, Dunleath was active in the Ulster Defence Regiment and was an Ulster Unionist Party member.[4] However, he joined the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, and was elected for the party in North Down at the 1973 Northern Ireland Assembly election. He held the seat on the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention.[5]

Dunleath was the only Alliance Party member in the House of Lords.[6] While there, he strongly promoted the Education (Northern Ireland) Act, 1978, which permitted representatives of the Roman Catholic church to take a role in the Protestant-dominated state school system.[7] He also attempted to introduce a bill to liberalise divorce law in Northern Ireland.[8]

Mulholland was chairman of a company which bid for the Independent Television licence for Northern Ireland in 1979. In order to place the bid, he was required to resign from his party affiliation,[6] and thereafter sat as a crossbencher.[7] However, he was elected at the 1982 Assembly election for the Alliance Party again in North Down.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Oliver Pritchett, "The team with the fate of radio in its hands", The Guardian, 29 May 1969
  2. Ivan Yates and Laurence Marks, "BBC: When Curran tried to blow the whistle", The Observer, 22 February 1970
  3. "Lord Hill goes to BBC", The Guardian, 27 July 1967
  4. "Ulster scheme to recruit women for search duties", The Guardian, 12 June 1973
  5. 1 2 North Down 1973-1982, Northern Ireland Elections
  6. 1 2 "Resignation", The Guardian, 3 November 1979
  7. 1 2 Bob Rodwell, "A fully-integrated, all-Protestant school", The Guardian, 2 November 1981
  8. Anne McHardy, "Divorce reform for Ulster", The Guardian, 20 July 1977
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.