| Biographical
Information
Acclaimed
as the Father of Barbados' Independence, Errol Walton Barrow was
born in the parish of St. Lucy on January 21, 1920. Over the 15-year
period of his Administration first as Premier and then as Prime
Minister ending in 1976, he was particularly successful in securing
many social changes for Barbados.
A
founder-member of the Democratic Labour Party, Barrow swept to power
as Premier in 1961 and held that position until 1966. He then took
the island into Independence from Britain after his party won elections
and he thus became Barbados' first Prime Minister.
Indeed,
Barrow was twice Prime Minister, in 1966 to 1976 and again in 1985
to 1987. He served as Opposition Leader during part of the interregnum
which he interrupted for an academic sabbatical in the United States
and, as he declared, "to recharge" his "batteries".
The
son of the late Rev. Reginald Grant Barrow and the late Ruth nee
O'Neal, Errol was the nephew of legendary Dr. Charles Duncan O'Neal,
founder of the Democratic League, and brother of Errol's mother.
In
December, 1939, Errol won a scholarship in Classics to Codrington
College but did not pursue those studies. Instead, he joined the
Royal Air Force and served in World War II.
He
was personal navigation officer to the Commander-in-Chief of the
British Army at the Rhine between 1940 and 1942. After his stint
in the RAF, Barrow studied law and was called to the Bar, Inns of
Court in 1949. He returned home in 1950 as a practising barrister-at-law
and became a member of the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) in 1951.
That
year he won a seat in St. George for the BLP which moved from 12
members in the House of Assembly to 16, thus obtaining a clear majority
for the first time. But the desire to fashion a new political force
led Barrow in 1955, along with Cameron Tudor and others to form
the Democratic Labour Party.
However,
he lost his seat in the 1956 General Elections, but returned to
Parliament after successfully contesting a by-election in St. John
in 1958.
Such
was the quality of his leadership and impact on Barbados' social
landscape that Barrow received many awards while serving as Head
of Government. Among them were an honorary Doctorate of Civil Law
from McGill University of Canada in 1966 and the Lions International
"Head of State Award" for "outstanding service to
the country" in 1967.
He
was guest of United States President Lyndon Johnson in 1968, was
made a Privy Councillor in 1969 and authored "Canada's Role
in the West Indies" (published in 1964 by the Canadian Institute
of International Affairs).
In
his first 15-year administration, says Theodore Sealy in his "Caribbean
Leaders", "it seems that social democracy in bringing
the people to be beneficiaries of the new kind of state, freed as
it is from the plantocracy, was the guiding spirit of his administration".
Barrow
achieved:
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