The Queen’s Birthday Honours 2014
16 Jun 2014 11:37 AM
The Queen’s
Birthday Honours lists 2014, recognise the achievements of a wide range of
extraordinary people across the UK.
The age of recipients ranges
from 19-year-old George Fielding, Chair, Ambassador and Kidz Board Member of
Whizz Kidz, who receives a British Empire Medal (BEM), to 99-year-old Ethel
Dobbins, who also receives a BEMfor her service to the community in
Thornton Cleveleys, Lancashire.
Read the full Birthday Honours
lists 2014.
The re-introduction of
the BEM has continued to provide the opportunity to recognise a large
number of people who are actively engaged in charitable or voluntary work
within their local community, making up 73% of the list.
Further
notable BEMs include Maurice Bernard, a health campaigner in his 70s
who uses his time to improve local dementia services; and Rosamond Dommett, who
founded the Ashcott Mother and Toddler group in Somerset, improving rural
community life. Also receiving the award is Adam Tuffrey, an inspirational
teenager and role model to his peers, who had meningitis when he was younger
and is now a Young Ambassador for the Meningitis Trust.
Notable Members of the Order of
the British Empire (MBEs) include Shirley Fewings, Manager, Dawlish and East
Teignbridge Volunteer Service, who works to support local residents, for
example during the storms in February 2014 when she led her volunteers to
support those evacuated from their homes.
There is also
an MBE for Reverend John Wood, vicar at St Ann’s Church in
Tottenham, who over the last 10 years has helped build a large and thriving
community and played an active role in building local relationships following
the riots in 2011.
In total, 1,149 people have
received an award:
- 1,001 candidates have been
selected at BEM, MBE and Officer of the Order of the British
Empire (OBE) level (300 at BEM, 474 at MBE and 227
at OBE)
- 73% per cent of the recipients
have undertaken outstanding work in their communities, either in a voluntary or
paid capacity
- there are 560 successful women
candidates in the list, representing 49% of the total, including 1 Companion of
Honour (CH), 10 Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBEs), 2
Companions of the Order of the Bath (CBs) and 39 Commanders of the Order of the
British Empire (CBEs)
- 6.2% of the successful
candidates come from ethnic minority communities, a slight increase on recent
lists
There are roughly equal numbers
of women and men on this Honours list (49% female) following New Year’s Honours
2014, the first time ever that there had been more women on the list than
men.
Senior women at DBE in
this list include Professor Jessica Corner, Dean of Health Sciences, University
of Southampton; fashion designer Zandra Rhodes; economist Katharine Barker;
author Hilary Mantel; and golfer Laura Davies. Most notably, there is a
Companion of Honour (CH) for Dame Maggie Smith, actress.
Among the other well-known names
being honoured there are knighthoods for actor Daniel Day-Lewis and classical
pianist András Schiff. There is a CBEfor Charlotte Edwards, Captain
of the England Women’s Cricket Team, andOBEs for actor Damian Lewis,
for Warren Gatland, Head Rugby Coach of Wales, and for tabla player Talvinder
Singh Matharoo.
There are MBEs for
Nicola Clarke, Chair of the Military Wives Choirs Foundation; singer and
songwriter Cerys Matthews, and for our 3 gold medallists at the Winter Games in
Sochi: Lizzy Yarnold (Skeleton, Winter Olympics), Kelly Gallagher and Charlotte
Evans (Alpine Skiing, Winter Paralympics).
There is also
an MBE for Stephen Sutton for his services to the Teenage Cancer
Trust, sadly backdated to the date of his death. Stephen had accepted the
proposed award, and for this reason his MBE is recorded alongside
others in the Birthday Honours list. It is clear that Stephen touched and
inspired a huge number of people and that his ambassadorial work for the
Teenage Cancer Trust was greatly appreciated by all those he
helped.
Find out more about the different types of
honours and awards andhow to nominate someone
for an honour.
Philanthropy
Philanthropy has once again been
a prominent theme amongst the recipients at both a national and a local level.
In particular, the recommendations include a knighthood for Ewan Brown, who has
made a considerable contribution to business and public life as Chairman,
Scottish Financial Enterprise, and Senior Governor, University of St Andrews,
in addition to a number of significant personal donations to
education.
There is a CBE for
Matthew Bowcock, a serial entrepreneur now at the forefront of community
philanthropy in the UK. At a more local level, there is a BEM for
Elaine Evans, who has personally supported the Royal Pavilion and Museums
Foundation in Brighton.
Parliamentary
The Parliamentary and Political
Service Committee, chaired by Lord Spicer, has recommended a DBE for
Dawn Primarolo, MP for Bristol South, and a Knight Commander of the Order of
the Bath (KCB) for Amyas Morse, Comptroller and Auditor General, National Audit
Office. There are also knighthoods for The Hon Nicholas Soames, MP for Mid
Sussex; and for Bill Cash, MP for Stone.
Education
In total, about 11% of honours
are for work in education. The Education Committee has recommended 33
headteachers in total, including knighthoods or damehoods for the following 5
headteachers: Erica Pienaar, lately Executive Headteacher,
Leathersellers’ Federation of Schools, Lewisham; Nicola Nelson-Taylor,
Headteacher, Beech Hill Primary and Executive Headteacher, Walbottle Primary
School, Newcastle upon Tyne; Andrew Carter, Headteacher, South Farnham
Community Junior School, Surrey; Barry Day, Chief Executive, Greenwood Dale
Foundation Trust and the Greenwood Academies Trust; and Dr Anthony Seldon,
Headteacher, Wellington College, Berkshire.
Also honoured with a knighthood
is Dr John Dunford, a former head and a major contributor to national education
policy. The education BEMs include an award to Andrew Jennison, Post
and Porterage Officer, De Montfort University, whose work as a Unison Learning
Representative has transformed people’s lives both at work and at
home.
Health
Health makes up 8% of all
honours. There is a rich breadth of vocations recognised within this sector.
Recommendations at MBE include 5 GPs, 3 nurses, a cardiologist,
a radiologist, a paediatric physiotherapist and a dental
technician.
Recommendations at knighthood
level include Robert Francis QC, Chairman of the Mid Staffordshire NHS
Foundation Trust Public Inquiry; Mike Deegan, Chief Executive, Central
Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; Professor Michael Owen,
Deputy Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research, Cardiff University and Professor David
Spiegelhalter, Winton Professor of the Public Understanding of Risk, University
of Cambridge.
Industry and the
economy
Industry and the economy make up
11% of this Honours list. Awards include aDBE for Dr Louise
Makin, CEO, British Technology Group plc; a knighthood for Philip Dilley,
Group Chairman, Ove Arup; a knighthood for Professor Charles Bean, Deputy
Governor for Monetary Policy, Bank of England, and a knighthood for Gerald
Grimstone, for public service, particularly to business and
defence.
The Committee was pleased to
have received more nominations from the technology sector and for
entrepreneurs. Awards at CBE include Dr David Gow, Inventor, I-Limb
Hand, whose technology leads the world improving the lives of people with upper
limb deficiencies; and Alastair Lukies, Founder andCEO, Monitise and named
‘Entrepreneur of the Year’ at the 2011 Growing Business
awards.
Awards at OBE include
1 for Dr Paul Hawkins, Managing Director and Chairman, Hawk-Eye Innovations
Ltd, whose technology has been used at Wimbledon and now on the goal line for
the FA Premier League. There are further OBEs for Kavita Oberoi,
Founder, Oberoi Consulting, whose business provides IT training for more than
20% of GP practices and Belinda Parmar,CEO of Lady Geek, a campaigning
agency that aims to make technology more appealing and accessible to
women.
There is also
an MBE for Jessica Huie, founder of ColorBlind Cards, who continues
to give significant assistance to entrepreneurs, regularly giving her time and
experience on a voluntary basis.
Science and
technology
Science and technology make up
3% of the total. The awards include a knighthood for Professor Colin Blakemore,
Director, Centre for the Study of the Senses, School of Advanced Study,
University of London; and for Professor Cary Cooper, Professor of
Organisational Psychology and Health, Lancaster University.
There are also knighthoods for
Professor Thomas Kibble, Senior Research Fellow and Emeritus Professor of
Theoretical Physics, Imperial College London; and for Professor John Pethica,
Chief Scientific Adviser, National Physical Laboratory and Vice-President, The
Royal Society.
Law and order
In Law and Order, the awards
include a knighthood for Jonathan Murphy, Chief Constable, Merseyside Police,
and a CBE for Judith Gillespie, Deputy Chief Constable, Police
Service of Northern Ireland. The recommendations for state servants include a
Dame Commander of the Order of the Bath (DCB) for Jilian Matheson, National
Statistician, Office for National Statistics, and Chief Executive, UK
Statistics Authority.
Among the
State BEM recipients is Janet Qualters, an administrative assistant
with the Ministry of Defence, who has helped to raise over £70,000 for
the Anthony Nolan Trust in her free time since 2006 and has been instrumental
in gaining well over 500 new bone marrow donors for the Anthony Nolan Trust
register.
Sport
Awards for sport make up 5% of
the total. In addition to the awards to Charlotte Edwards, Warren Gatland, and
our gold medallists at Sochi, there is a CBE for Paul Sinton-Hewitt,
Founder of Parkrun; an MBE for Jennifer Gunn, Vice-Captain, England
Women’s Cricket Team; and an MBE for Kevin Sinfield, Captain,
Leeds Rhinos Rugby League Football Club and England.
Awards to grass-roots sport
include an MBE to Dilawer Singh, who has made a lifetime contribution
introducing new communities to sport in Glasgow through the Scottish Ethnic
Minorities Sports Association. He is currently Vice-Chair of the Sports Council
for Glasgow and was part of the 2014 Commonwealth Games Bid
Team