Kenneth Stowe
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Sir Kenneth Ronald Stowe Template:Postnominals (17 July 1927 – 29 August 2015) was a senior British civil servant. He was Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister (1975-79), and the Permanent Under-Secretary of State of the Northern Ireland Office (1979-81). From 1981-87, he was Permanent Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Security. He was made a CB in 1977, CVO in 1979, and KCB in 1980 and a GCB in 1986.
Biography
Stowe was born in Dagenham, Essex on 17 July 1927.[1] His father, Arthur Percy Stowe, was a maker of spectacles. His mother was Emmie Louise Webb. His parents married in 1926.[2]
Stowe attended Dagenham County High School and studied history, under a scholarship, at Exeter College, Oxford.[3]
On 20 August 1949, Stowe married Joan Frances Randall Cullen, a teacher, in Essex. The couple went on to have two sons and a daughter. He was left a widower in 1995.[2][1]
Stowe graduated in 1951, he joined the civil service's National Assistance Board (later to become the Ministry of Social Security), working directly with those people who were asking for help. In 1973, he began employment as under-secretary at the Cabinet Office in the Legislation Committee.[2][1] When Robert Armstrong moved on in 1975, he was recommended to Harold Wilson as Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister. He remained in the role for four years, serving under Harold Wilson, James Callaghan and for the first few months of Margaret Thatcher's premiership.[2]
Thatcher appointed Stowe as Permanent Under-Secretary of State of the Northern Ireland Office in 1979, where he brokered an agreement during the 1980 hunger strike at Maze prison, although it did not hold. He became permanent secretary for the Department of Health and Social Security in 1981, responsible for over a million individuals in the NHS and social services departments.[2]
After retirement in 1987, Stowe spent a period advising public service reform in Zimbabwe and South Africa, as well as reform programs in the UK. He received multiple honours during his time in the civil service, a CB in 1977, CVO in 1979, and KCB in 1980 and a GCB in 1986.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
He spent his later years with his partner, Judith Mary Phillips, and died at his home in Lingen, Herefordshire on 29 August 2015, aged 88.[2][4]
References
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External links
Template:Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister Template:Authority control
- Pages with script errors
- 1927 births
- 2015 deaths
- Permanent Under-Secretaries of State for Northern Ireland
- Permanent Under-Secretaries of State for Social Services
- Private secretaries in the British Civil Service
- Commanders of the Royal Victorian Order
- Fellows of Exeter College, Oxford
- Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
- Principal private secretaries to the prime minister