Jack Butterworth, Baron Butterworth
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John Blackstocke Butterworth, CBE, DL, (13 March 1918 – 19 June 2003), was a British lawyer.
Jack, as he liked to be called, was graduated in jurisprudence from Oxford University on the eve of the Second World War. He enlisted in the Royal Artillery and spent much of the war in Scotland, protecting strategic targets from air attack.
He qualified in 1946 as a barrister at Lincoln’s Inn, and then became a law tutor at New College, Oxford. He had a reputation as an outstanding teacher and he was made an Honorary Bencher of Lincoln’s Inn in 1953. He was quick-witted and shrewd, which accounts for his appointment as bursar of New College for the last seven years of his time at Oxford.
He became the first Vice-Chancellor of the University of Warwick. In 1963. Warwick was one of the handful of new universities created in the wake of the Robbins Report (1962). One of his colleagues at the time described him as “a noisy” vice chancellor.[citation needed]
Butterworth believed strongly that his job was to select professors who would be leaders in their discipline and that he should stand aside and let them develop their subjects in their own way (though within a tight budget).[citation needed] Because he had worked only at Oxford, he wanted Oxford’s standards of academic performance at the undergraduate level and in research.[citation needed] He had a belief that Warwick must maintain a balance between ‘pure’ and ‘applied’ disciplines: you could justify a strong commitment to the Humanities if you had a Business School, a very pure Maths Department if you had Engineering.[citation needed]
A large part of Warwick’s success stems from Butterworth’s cultivation of links with the rich industrial enterprises of the Midlands.[citation needed] One of his first creations was an industrial centre, intended as a stimulus of advanced engineering in the region. Similarly, he cultivated (and earned) municipal goodwill.
He also built the Warwick Arts Centre. His link with Miss Martin, the famous ‘Anonymous Benefactor’, represented the crucial launching pad for the project,[citation needed] but funds came from many sources including a contribution for the third and final phase from the about to be abolished West Midlands County Council whose gift was steered through by a Coventry Councillor. It was somehow typical that Butterworth, whose politics could not have been more different, could persuade a radical left wing politician that such a project deserved support. He traded on the sympathies of his friends on grantmaking committees for consideration of Warwick and held forth without giving quarter to ministers he happened to bump into in corridors.
Baron Butterworth's period as vice chancellor was not without controversy, particularly regarding his opposition to the establishment of a Students' union. Above the main bar of the Students Union building at Warwick University there is an inscription quoting him as saying "The Students' union shall never have its own building". His period of office included the student protests beginning in the late 1960s. During one event the vice chancellor’s office was occupied and files rummaged through. These protests were supported by the social historian, the late Professor Edward Thompson, one of Butterworth's own appointments.
His other passions were the Association of Commonwealth Universities, a post-imperial organisation devoted to providing assistance to anglophone universities in developing countries, of which he was chairman for ten years; and the Foundation for Science and Technology, of which he became chairman in 1990, subsequently holding the position of president until his death. His appointment to the House of Lords as a life peer on retirement from the University in 1985 was a lifeline for one with such an abounding surplus of energy. He took the title Baron Butterworth, of Warwick in the County of Warwickshire. Breaking with the tradition that vice-chancellors who are made Lords pretend to be above party politics, he chose to be labelled a Conservative.
Butterworth married his wife Doris in 1948 and they had one son and two daughters. He died on 19th June 2003.
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by New university |
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Warwick 1965–1985 |
Succeeded by Clark L. Brundin |