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SuperAttainer:
Margaret Thatcher

British Political Leader:
Margaret
Thatcher
Main
Life Accomplishments:
She
is a British politician, who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from
1979 to 1990 and Leader of the Conservative Party from 1975 to 1990. She
is the first and only woman to date to hold either post.
Basics:
Born: 13
October 1925 (1925-10-13) (age 82) Grantham, Lincolnshire, England
Died:
Nationality: British
Religion: Methodist
Fields: Politics, Military
Main Accomplishments: Thatcher's tenure as Prime Minister was
the longest since that of Lord Salisbury and was the longest continuous
period in office since Lord Liverpool was Prime Minister in the early 19th
century. She was the first woman to lead a major political party in the
UK, and the first of only three women to have held any of the four great
offices of state.
Chronology
of Life Events:
1925
Margaret
Hilda Roberts is born in Grantham, Lincolnshire on October 13.
1936
Margaret
the grocer’s daughter goes to Kesteven & Grantham Girls’ School.
BBC starts television service and Edward VIII begins his reign, but soon
abdicates. The Spanish Civil War begins and Olympic Games held in Berlin
where Jessie Owen wins enough gold medals to make Hitler's moustache
twitch.
1943
Margaret
goes to Oxford something she never said she allowed to hold her back. She
studied chemistry and became the first female president of the Oxford
University Conservative Association. Churchill and Roosevelt hold the
Casablanca Conference and Mussolini is deposed as the German’s surrender
at Stalingrad.
1950
Margaret
is working as a research chemist, among her projects are a means of
improving the freezing, if not the flavour, of ice cream paving the way
for Mr Whippy. The first modern credit card is introduced in the USA and
Labour win the general election which Margaret involves herself in as the
unsuccessful Tory candidate for Dartford.
1951
Margaret
marries entrepreneur Dennis Thatcher and begins her studies to become a
lawyer. South Africa (where Denis has several business interests) are
forced to carry ID Cards identifying their racial background. Winston
Churchill wins 1951 election and the Festival of Britain was held to
celebrate the centenary of the 1851 Great Exhibition.
1953
Margaret
gives birth to twins Mark and Carol. She begins to study law. First men to
climb Everest and Korean War ends, the Crucible opens on Broadway and
North Sea flood kills 307 in the South East.
1959
Margaret
wins the parliamentary seat of Finchley. Cuban revolution means that
Castro takes power and the Sound of Music opened on Broadway. The
Conservatives gained a third consecutive general election victory in
October so Harold Macmillan stayed on as Prime Minister.
1966
England
win the World Cup and Eric Cantona was born.
1968
Margaret
votes to liberalise the abortion laws and to decriminalise male
homosexuality. England win the World Cup and Eric Cantona was born.
1970
Margaret
becomes Education Minister after Ted Heath’s shock election victory
though more shocking to many people is the break up of the Beatles. Hardly
anyone noticed the introduction of the first floppy disks though.
1974
Conservatives
lose election (twice) and Margaret along with other right wingers plot the
end of Ted Heath’s leadership. Elsewhere the Terracotta Army is
discovered in China and Lord Lucan Richard John Bingham disappeared.
1975
Margaret
wins the leadership of the Conservative Party and Arthur Ashe was the
first black man to win Wimbledon. The Common Market referendum was held in
June and 67% said that the UK should stay in.
1976
A
little speech about the Iron Curtain becomes a major event as Pravda dubs
Margaret Thatcher the Iron Lady. Anarchy in the UK is released by the Sex
Pistols signalling a dramatic shift in British music and culture.
1979
The
Conservative Party wins the election and Thatcher becomes Britain's first
woman Prime Minister. Ayatollah Khomeini returns from exile to become
leader of Iran. Sony Introduces the walkman and Brighton became the first
UK seaside town to introduce a beach for nude bathing.
1980
Margaret
Thatcher refuses to make a u-turn on her economic policy despite rising
unemployment and inflation. John Lennon was shot dead on December 8 and
that Xmas aside from buying ‘Give peace a chance’ most people got a
Rubiks Cube which were introduced that year.
1981
Margaret
faces a series of strikes and South London went up in flames as rioting
spread through Brixton in April. In July, rioting broke out in dozens of
cities across the country most ferociously in Liverpool prompting the
reworking of the old folk saying, red sky at night, Toxteth’s alight.
IBM released the first personal computer for sale in October.
1982
Margeret’s
taskforce retakes the Falkland Islands and increases her popularity. E.T.
is released and in December, women surrounded Greenham Common military
base to protest about the installation of nuclear weapons when perhaps
they might have been better advised protesting against Trivial Pursuit
which was released that year.
1983
Conservative
Party wins a landslide election after the opposition is split by the
Social Democratic Party and My Little Pony is popular too. The winning
racehorse of the 1981 Derby, Shergar, was stolen in February and has never
been heard of since. The Americans responded to a left-wing coup in
Grenada by sending in troops. Britain responded angrily to the American
action in a British colony.
1984
Defeats
the striking miners and narrowly avoids assassination by the IRA at
Brighton. Figure skaters Jane Torvill and Christopher Dean amazed the
world and took the gold medal for Britain at the Winter Olympics on
Valentine's Day (February 14). A new disease (AIDS) is recognised and Band
Aid single tops the charts.
1985
Margaret
claims that there are too many football clubs and the industry should be
rationalised in the season that 40 people died at Valley Parade Bradford
after a stand caught fire and 39 more after a wall collapsed during the
European Cup Final in Belgium between Liverpool and Juventus. Margaret is
refused an honourary degree by Oxford University and the Titanic was
located at the bottom of the North Atlantic.
1986
Margaret
allows the US airforce to use British bases to bomb Libya and in April,
the Russian nuclear reactor at Chernobyl in the Ukraine suffered a major
accident which resulted in thirty deaths. Michael Heseltine resigns from
the cabinet over the Westland affair.
1987
Record
third general election victory in the year that DNA is first used to
convict criminals and Britain was hit by a hurricane with winds of up to
110mph causing 17 deaths and damage across the country.
1988
Margaret
Thatcher accepts the science behind global warming and pledges to do more
for the environment. In December, junior health minister Edwina Curry
caused panic by suggesting salmonella bacteria was wide spread in the
British egg farming industry. Not that it affected the sale of wobbly eggs
as Britain went acciiiieeeddd crazy and the rave fuelled summer of love
followed typically refusing to join the fun Morrissey records Margaret on
the Guillotine.
1989
Interest
rates are raised to stop the economic boom fuelling inflation and the Poll
Tax is introduced in Scotland. Margaret is quoted as saying ‘we have
become grandmother’ after her daughter gives birth. Salman Rushdie went
into hiding following a fatwa over the author's book Satanic Verses. On
November 10, the Berlin Wall was taken down.
1990
Following
a challenge to her leadership, Margaret Thatcher resigns and is succeeded
by John Major. Nelson Mandela is freed and Poll Tax Riots erupt in central
London. British beef was taken off menus across Europe following the
discovery of the infection BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), also
known as Mad Cow Disease ironically just as the Channel Tunnel is
completed.
1992
Margaret
Thatcher enters the House of Lords as Baroness Thatcher at the official
end of the Cold War and also the marriage of Prince Charles and Lady Di.
Somewhat surprisingly John Major wins the election for the conservatives.
1997
William
Hague with strong backing from Margaret is elected leader of the Tories.
On her way to a press conference she quips ‘you knew I was coming
didn’t you see the Mummy Returns posters. Tony Blair is elected by a
landslide for Labour and the era of Cool Britannia begins (and ends).
2003
Denis
Thatcher dies leaving Margaret alone. Second Gulf War starts over
fictitious weapons of mass destruction and Robin Cook resigns from the
Labour Cabinet.
2004
Ronald
Reagan dies and American re-elects George Bush the son of his vice
president. Margaret makes her first public statement in a long while at
his funeral.
2005
Musical
is written about her life entitled True Blue and another one called
Thatcher the musical.
2006:
Proposed
monument to Lady Thatcher deemed to be a traffic hazard.
2007
Film
of her life proposed.
2008
Play
the Death of Margaret Thatcher opens to general lack of applause whilst
the lady herself has surgery in St Thomas' Hospital
Early
Life:
Margaret
Hilda Roberts was born on the 13 October 1925 to Alfred Roberts,
originally from Northamptonshire, and Beatrice Roberts nee Stephenson from
Lincolnshire. Thatcher spent her childhood in the town of Grantham in
Lincolnshire, where her father owned two grocery shops. She and her older
sister Muriel (born 1921, Grantham; died December 2004) were raised in the
flat above the larger of the two located near the railway line. Her father
was active in local politics and religion, serving as an Alderman and
Methodist lay preacher. He came from a Liberal family but stood—as was
then customary in local government—as an Independent. He lost his post
as Alderman in 1952 after the Labour Party won its first majority on
Grantham Council in 1950.
Thatcher was brought up a devout Methodist and has remained a Christian
throughout her life. After attending Huntingtower Road Primary School, she
received a scholarship and attended Kesteven and Grantham Girls' School.
Her school reports show hard work and commitment, but not brilliance.
Outside the classroom she played hockey and also enjoyed swimming and
walking. Finishing school during the Second World War, she subsequently
applied for a scholarship to attend Somerville College, Oxford and was
only successful when the winning candidate dropped out. She went to Oxford
in 1943 and studied Natural Sciences and specialised in Chemistry.
She became President of the Oxford University Conservative Association in
1946, the third woman to hold the post. Thatcher graduated with a BA from
Oxford in 1946 with Second Class Honours in Final Honours School. She
subsequently studied crystallography and received a postgraduate B.Sc.
degree in 1947. Her BA status was converted to MA by Oxford in 1950.
Following graduation, Margaret Roberts moved to Colchester and worked as a
research chemist for BX Plastics. During this time she joined the local
Conservative Association and attended the party conference at Llandudno in
1948, as a representative of the University Graduate Conservative
Association. She was also a member of the Association of Scientific
Workers. In January 1949, a friend from Oxford, who was working for the
Dartford Conservative Association, told her that they were looking for
candidates. After a brief period, she was selected as the Conservative
candidate, and she subsequently moved to Dartford to stand for election as
a Member of Parliament. To support herself during this period, she went to
work for J. Lyons and Co., where she helped develop methods for preserving
ice cream and was paid £500 per year.
Husband
Background:
Major
Sir Denis Thatcher, 1st Baronet, MBE, TD (10 May 1915 – 26 June 2003)
was an English businessman, and the husband of the former British Prime
Minister, The Baroness Thatcher. He was born in Lewisham, London, England,
the elder child of a New Zealand-born British businessman, Thomas Herbert
(Jack) Thatcher, and his wife (Lilian) Kathleen, née Bird. As of 2007, he
is the last person outside the British Royal Family to be awarded a
hereditary title.
At
the age of eight he entered a preparatory school as a boarder in Bognor
Regis, following which he attended the leading nonconformist public
school, Mill Hill. He left school at the age of 18 to join the family
paint and preservatives business, Atlas Preservatives. He enlisted in the
army shortly after the Munich crisis, convinced war was imminent.
During the Second World War, he served in the 34th Searchlight (Queen's
Own Royal West Kent Regiment) of the Royal Engineers before being promoted
to the rank of major. Although, to his regret, he saw no real fighting, he
was twice Mentioned in Despatches, and in 1945 was appointed an MBE.
Leaving the forces in 1946, he returned to run the family business, his
father having died, aged 57, on 24 June 1943, when Thatcher was in Sicily.
On 28 March 1942 he married Margaret Doris Kempson, the daughter of
Leonard Kempson, a businessman at Monken Hadley. The childless marriage
ended in divorce, in 1948. She met someone else whilst Thatcher was away
and married him later.
In February 1949, while attending a Paint Trades Federation function in
Dartford, he met Margaret Roberts, a chemist and newly-selected
parliamentary candidate. They married on 13 December 1951, and had twin
children, Carol and Mark, in 1953.
Thatcher financed his wife's training as a barrister and a home in
Chelsea; he also bought a large house in Lamberhurst, Kent in 1965. His
firm employed 200 people by 1957, but he sold it to Castrol on 26 August
1965 after suffering a mild nervous breakdown in 1964. He received a seat
on Castrol's parent board, which he maintained when Burmah Oil took it
over in 1966. He retired from Burmah in June 1975, four months after his
wife won the Conservative Party leadership election.
In addition to being a director of Burmah, he was chairman of the Atlas
Preservative Co, vice-chairman of Attwoods plc from 1983 to January 1994,
a director of Quinton Hazell plc from 1968 to 1998, and a consultant to
Amec plc and CSX Corp. He was also a non-executive director of Halfords in
the mid-1980s.
Father
Background:
Alfred
Roberts (18 April 1892 – 10 February 1970) was a grocer, a lay preacher,
an alderman and a Mayor of Grantham. He was the father of Margaret
Thatcher, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Roberts was born in Ringstead and grew up in Northamptonshire. He was the
fifth of seven children born to Benjamin Ebenezer Roberts and Ellen Smith.
His bad eyesight meant he could not enter the family trade of shoemaking.
He left school at thirteen in order to help support his family and moved
to Grantham, Lincolnshire, where he gained a job as an apprentice in a
grocery store; he had originally wanted to become a teacher. When World
War I broke out in 1914, Roberts, "a deeply patriotic man",
applied to enlist in the army six times but was rejected because of his
poor eyesight.
Four years after moving to Grantham, Roberts met Beatrice Ethel Stephenson
through the local Methodist church, which he attended every Sunday. They
married in Grantham on May 28, 1917 and had two daughters, both born in
Grantham: Muriel (1921 - December 2004) and Margaret (born 1925). In 1919
they bought the grocery shop and in 1923 Roberts opened a second shop. He
took one week off work every year to compete in the annual bowls
tournament at Skegness. He was a religious man and also a routine lay
preacher who met prominent Methodists such as Leslie Weatherhead and
Donald Soper.
Roberts was an "old-fashioned liberal" who believed strongly in
individual responsibility and sound finance. He had read and admired John
Stuart Mill's On Liberty. He came from a family that traditionally voted
Liberal but he believed that the Liberal Party had embraced collectivism
and that the Conservatives stood for the old liberalism. His daughter
Muriel recalled that Roberts "was always a Liberal at heart". In
the 1935 general election, Roberts helped the local Conservative candidate
Victor Warrender to win the seat.
In 1927 Roberts was elected to the Grantham town council as an
independent. He was also a part-time Justice of the Peace, president of
the Chamber of Trade, President of Rotary, a director of the Grantham
Building Society, a director of the Trustee Savings Bank, chairman of the
local National Savings Movement, a governor of the local boys and girls
grammar schools and chairman of the Workers' Educational Association.
During the Second World War he was Chief Welfare Officer, directing civil
defence. He soon became Chairman of the Finance and Rating Committee, and
in 1943 he was elected by the council as an Alderman and then served as
the Mayor of Grantham from November 1945 to 1946, in which he presided
over the town's victory celebrations. In his inaugural speech Roberts
called for a large programme of expenditure to rebuild the roads, public
transport, health and social services for children and to "build
houses by the thousand."
On May 21, 1952 Roberts was voted out as Alderman by the first Labour
majority on the council and as the vote was taken he proclaimed: "It
is now almost nine years since I took up these robes in honour, and now I
trust in honour they are laid down."[8] When his daughter Margaret
recalled this event over thirty years later during an interview with
Miriam Stoppard she said it was "very emotional" and wept on
television.
Roberts retired and sold his business in 1958 but continued to preach and
remained active in the Rotary Club. After Beatrice died in 1960 Roberts
remarried in 1965 to Cecily Miriam Hubbard. Roberts died in 1970.
Mother
Background:
Her
mother is Beatrice Stephenson Roberts from Lincolnshire.

SuperAttainer
ANALYSIS
SECTION:
1. Early Success
When
did the SuperAttainer first display ability that was greatly above average
and what were his accomplishments?
REFERENCES:
1.
2. Contrarian
What actions did the SuperAttainer take that demonstrated a mindset that was
very different from those around him?
REFERENCES:
1.
3. Conceited
What are the actions and documented statements that exhibit an elevated
sense of self importance of the SuperAttainer?
REFERENCES:
1.
4. Hard-Knocked
During what events did the SuperAttainer experience personal misery and
severe anxiety?
REFERENCES:
1.
5. Loner
Is there evidence of the SuperAttainer being comfortable spending time apart
from others?
REFERENCES:
1.
6. Mentored &
Motivated
Who was vital to developing the SuperAttainer and guiding his career and
what significant actions were taken?
REFERENCES:
1.
7. Discontent
What evidence is there that the SuperAttainer was unsatisfied with even
great personal accomplishment?
REFERENCES:
1.
8. Promoted
What actions or events were responsible for publicizing the tremendous
achievements and abilities of the SuperAttainer?
REFERENCES:
1.
Overall
Score:
x
out of 8 = xx%
PASS
SuperAttainer
Type:
Describe
the factors in the SuperAttainer’s background to indicate whether he is a
Come-From-Nothing or Aristocratic type..
Conclusion:

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