Anthony Berry


Sir Anthony George Berry was a British Conservative politician. He served as Member of Parliament for Enfield Southgate and a Whip in Margaret Thatcher's government.
Berry sat in the House of Commons for twenty years until being killed in the Brighton hotel bombing of 1984 by the Provisional IRA.

Early life

Born at Eton, Buckinghamshire, Berry was the sixth and youngest son of the newspaper magnate Gomer Berry, 1st Viscount Kemsley, and his wife Mary née Holmes.
Educated at Eton College, he went up to Christ Church, Oxford, before serving as a Lieutenant in the Welsh Guards from 1943 to 1947.

Career

After resigning his commission in the Guards, Berry went into journalism. He was an Assistant Editor of The Sunday Times from 1952 to 1954, when he was appointed as Editor of the Sunday Chronicle.
Berry served as High Sheriff of Glamorgan for 1962/63.
Standing as a Conservative, he was elected as Member of Parliament for Southgate at the 1964 general election, and served in Margaret Thatcher's government after the Conservatives won the 1979 general election as Vice-Chamberlain of the Household between 1979 and 1981, then as Comptroller of the Household from 1981 to 1983, and was appointed Treasurer of the Household in 1983. Berry was knighted in December 1983.

Death

On 12 October 1984, Berry was murdered in the Brighton hotel bombing, when a bomb was planted at the Grand Brighton Hotel during the Conservative Party Conference. He was 59. Sir Anthony was survived by his wife, Lady Berry, who was injured in the blast. His death occurred three days before the 20th anniversary of his first election to Parliament in 1964.
Berry dying in office triggered a by-election in Enfield Southgate, which was won by future Cabinet minister Michael Portillo.
In September 1986, Patrick Magee, who carried out the bombing, received eight life sentences, but was released from prison in 1999 under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.
Since Magee's release, Berry's daughter Jo, has been appointed CBE after receiving attention for her series of controversial meetings with the Brighton bomber, as part of her quest to come to terms with the bombing and, in her own words, "to bring something positive out of it". Some of their discussions were filmed for an Everyman programme, shown on BBC Two in December 2001. She has received criticism from other families of IRA victims for her liaisons.
A ceremony was held in Berry's Enfield Southgate constituency on 12 October 2009, the 25th anniversary of the bombing, at which his widow and her daughter Sasha unveiled a plaque in his honour at the newly-renamed Sir Anthony Berry House in Chaseville Parade, Winchmore Hill.

Personal life

In 1954, at Westminster, Berry married firstly the Hon. Mary Cynthia Roche, a daughter of Maurice Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy. Mary's sister, Frances Shand Kydd, married John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer, and so Berry was an uncle of Diana, Princess of Wales.
Berry and his wife Mary had four children: Alexandra Mary Bartz, Antonia Ruth Butterworth and Joanna Cynthia Tufnell, and Edward Anthony Morys Berry, whose son William Berry married Alicia Rose Meynell in 2024.
He married secondly Sarah Clifford-Turner at Chelsea in 1966, having two more children: George, and Sasha Jane.
Shortly before his death, Sir Anthony was being prosecuted for drink-driving and reckless driving after allegedly driving at two police officers who were attempting to stop his vehicle, injuring one of them; allegedly he also narrowly missed hitting two pedestrians.

Honours and appointments