Stuart Keith SpryMBE (1911 – 14 October 1991) was a New Zealand swimmer, conservationist and local politician. On his death The Dominion described him as "one of the great identities of Wellington city".[1]
Biography
Early life and career
Spry was born in New Zealand in 1911 on either 6 June (death entry) or 6 July (birth entry) [2] to Palmer and Isabel Spry. In his youth Spry was a talented swimmer. He was New Zealand champion at breaststroke and only narrowly missed out on selection for the New Zealand swim team for the 1934 British Empire Games.[3] His love of swimming, other sports and outdoor activities as a child lasted all of his life.[4] He was active in Surf Life Saving New Zealand and was bestowed with a service award in 1953.[5]
Spry was a textile importer and women's wear manufacturer by trade.[3] He married Edith (Eda) Beatrice Burney in 1935 with whom he had two sons and two daughters.[1]
Political career
In 1965 Spry was elected to the Wellington City Council on a Labour Party ticket and held a seat continuously until he retired from the council in 1986.[6] Wellington Mayor Sir Michael Fowler later described Spry as an "extremely good" councillor.[7] Spry was a conservationist and spent 15 years as the chairman of the parks and recreation committee.[3] He supported the move by councillor George Porter to formalise town planning procedure and inserted provisions to incentivize developers to preserve areas for open space so locals can use them for recreation. Spry was affectionately known as "Mr Parks" for his advocacy and was labelled as "...a 'greenie' long before the word was ever coined".[4] After the 1974 election he became leader of Labour's council caucus and accordingly he was nominated for the post of Deputy Mayor. Spry was experienced for the role, having been a member of almost every council committee and had been a committee chairman. However he lost the vote to comparatively inexperienced three-year councillor Ian Lawrence.[8]
Spry was also a member of the Wellington Harbour Board. He was first elected in 1977 and served four terms until the board was dis-established in 1989.[12] His main achievement on the board was the reclamation of land on the coast. At Spry's insistence much of the area was reserved for recreation and merged to enlarge Marine Park (which is now known as Frank Kitts Park). While supporting reclamation in Wellington city, he opposed similar development in Petone as it would have infringed on the "Queen's Chain" (a 20 metre strip of land near the mouth of the Hutt River) which had been reserved in 1840 to allow free access. He also successfully lobbied for Somes Island to be repurposed from a quarantine station to a dedicated area for conservation and scientific research. Twice he failed to pass a motion for Wellington Harbour to be declared as a nuclear free zone.[4] In 1986 he opposed a plan for the Harbour Board become a public company. Instead the board approved Spry's motion that the board seek legislation giving it commercial autonomy, the ability to enter into port activities such as stevedoring, and the establishment of a single waterside trade union.[13]
He was a foundation member of the Wellington Regional Council, elected for three terms between 1980 and 1989.[4] He was the deputy chairman of the council and chairman of its operations committee. He had a brief absence from the council in early 1988 when he was hospitalised with a knee operation. He remained in hospital longer than expected due to complications with stitching.[14]
^"Stalemate in Choice of Candidate". Evening Post. 8 June 1960.
^"Spry's arena to still serve public". The Evening Post. 2 May 1986.
^Johnson, David (1996). "Members and Officers of the Wellington Harbour Board, Appendix 1". Wellington Harbour. Wellington Maritime Museum Trust. p. 479. ISBN0958349800.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Keith Spry.
Betts, G.M. (1970). Betts on Wellington: A City and its Politics. Wellington: A. H. & A. W. Reed Ltd. ISBN0 589 00469 7.
Meyer, R. J. (Bob) (1990). Up in the Hills: a history of Johnsonville. Wellington: Northern Suburbs Community Newspaper Trust. ISBN0-473-00925-0.
Norton, Clifford (1988). New Zealand Parliamentary Election Results 1946–1987: Occasional Publications No 1, Department of Political Science. Wellington: Victoria University of Wellington. ISBN0-475-11200-8.
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