Harry Greenway (4 October 1934 – 18 January 2024) was an English teacher who became a Conservative politician as the Member of Parliament for the Ealing North constituency from 1979 to 1997. He was especially passionate about horse-riding, introduced equestrian activities to the schools that he worked for and was the President of the Association of British Riding Schools for many years.
Personal life and education
Harry Greenway was born in Worcester, England on 4 October 1934,[1] the son of John Kenneth Greenway and Violet Adelaide (née Bell).[2][3] He married in 1969, Carol Elizabeth Helena, elder daughter of the late Major John Robert Thomas Hooper, barrister at law and Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate, and Dorinda Hooper (née de Courcy Ireland).
Greenway was a supporter of Aston Villa FC.[4] He died after a long illness on 18 January 2024, at the age of 89.[5][1]
Career in education
During the 1960s he was a schoolteacher of English and sport, later becoming the head house master of Telford House at Sir William Collins Secondary School for boys (later mixed, and renamed South Camden Community School and then Regent High School), in Charrington Street, Somers Town, London, a large state comprehensive school of about 1,200 boys at the time. He introduced several new sports to the school, including horse riding and other equine activities, winter sports, and men's hockey. He later became deputy headmaster of Sedgehill Secondary School, a very large comprehensive school in south-east London with approximately 2,200 pupils, between 1972 and 1979.
In 1992, Greenway, as a member of the Commons, was prosecuted for the common law offence of bribery of a person holding a public office. The case collapsed because of insufficient evidence of a related trial involving the Plasser railway machinery company.[10][11]
Greenway was President of the Association of British Riding Schools (ABRS) for many years, until 2002. Greenway was interviewed in Michael Moore's TV Nation series (S1E9) about his views on caning in schools.