Neil Cherry
Neil James Cherry was a New Zealand environmental scientist.
Biography
Early life and family
Cherry was born in Christchurch on 29 September 1946. His parents were James Conrad Cherry and Mona Hartley, who had married in 1940. Cherry could trace his ancestry back to the Cressy, one of the First Four Ships that started the settlement of Canterbury.Cherry was educated at Christchurch Technical College, and went on to study physics at the University of Canterbury, graduating BSc(Hons) in 1969 and PhD in 1971. His doctoral thesis, supervised by R.G.T. Bennett and G.J. Fraser, was titled A study of wind and waves.
In 1968, Cherry married Gae Denise Miller, and the couple went on to have two children.
Career
Cherry specialised most recently in the effects of electromagnetic radiation on human health, following his earlier work in meteorology and wind energy.Politics
At the he stood for the Labour Party in the Christchurch electorate of. He boosted Labour's vote by 6.73%, but fell 311 votes short of defeating the incumbent MP Philip Burdon. Ahead of the he put himself forward to replace former Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer as the Labour candidate for. He lost out on the Labour nomination to Lianne Dalziel but was, by his own estimation, the second preference and pledged to campaign for Dalziel.Cherry served as a Councillor on the Canterbury Regional Council (Environment Canterbury) from 1992.
Later life and death
[Image:Windflow's prototype windmill.jpg|thumb|160px|right|Windflow Technology's prototype windmill was named "Neil" to honour Cherry]Cherry was diagnosed with motor neurone disease in 2001, and became increasingly immobile until his death in 2003.