John Hatch, Baron Hatch of Lusby
John Charles Hatch, Baron Hatch of Lusby (1 November 1917–11 October 1992) was a British author, broadcaster, lecturer and Labour Party politician.[1]
Hatch was born in Stockport, Lancashire but moved to Yorkshire at an early age where he attended Keighley Boy's Grammar School. He later attended Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He subsequently became a tutor in Labour colleges and a lecturer at the University of Glasgow.[2]
Between 1950 and 1970 he served as Commonwealth correspondent for the New Statesman,[2] and developed a lifelong interest in African affairs, serving as a policy adviser to leaders such as Julius Nyerere and Kenneth Kaunda amongst others.[2] He was Commonwealth Secretary of the Labour Party during the 1950s,[2][3] before becoming Director of the Extra-Mural Department of the University of Sierra Leone in 1961.
He was made a life peer in May 1978 as Baron Hatch of Lusby of Oldfield in the County of West Yorkshire.
Publications
- Coal for the people; the mines for the miners... (1946)
- The Dilemma of South Africa (1952)
- The intelligent socialist's guide to Africa (1953)
- New from Africa (1956)
- Everyman's Africa (1959)
- Africa today-and tomorrow (1965)
- A History of Post-war Africa (1965)
- The History of Britain in Africa (1966)
- Africa - the rebirth of self-rule (1967)
- Nigeria: A history (1971)
- Tanzania: A profile (1972)
- Africa emergent: Africa's problems since independence (1974)
- Two African statesmen: Kaunda of Zambia and Nyerere of Tanzania (1976)
- Kaunda of Zambia (1980)
References
- ↑ ‘HATCH OF LUSBY’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2014
- 1 2 3 4 Jenkins, Hugh (13 October 1992). "Obituary: Lord Hatch of Lusby". The Independent. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
- ↑ "Hailsham rejects Suez attack". The Glasgow Herald. 15 January 1987. p. 6.
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