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Jeremy Fry, industrialist, inventor and socialite was born on the 24th May
1924 in Bristol, the youngest of three children. His father, Cecil Fry, was
the last member of the Quaker family to chair the Fry's Chocolate firm. He
went to school at Gordonstoun from where he won a place at the Architectural
Association School. During the Second World War he served as
RAF aircrew. Jeremy was too young to join in with Joe and David's pre-war
hill climbing and CAPA activities but took up the sport on being demobbed
including driving a Bugatti on the hills and then commissioning the
Parsenn from Keith Steadman in 1949.
Jeremy became a successful industrialist. He
invented the modern electric valve actuator, and with a small inheritance,
bought Rotork Controls in 1957 as a vehicle to manufacture and market his
creations. Today the company is a world leader in manufacturing equipment
used in oil and gas pipelines.
At Rotork Fry took on young James Dyson and together they
developed the sea truck, a high-speed landing craft that secured them many
awards. Dyson went on to create the ball-barrow and the successful
vacuum cleaner. With his old friend Armstrong-Jones, Fry reinvented the
wheelchair, creating a four-wheel drive model with power steering known as
the Squirrel.
Fry’s home, Widcombe Manor, near Bath was renowned for memorable parties and
guests including Princess Margaret and her fiancé.
He
bought and restored the Theatre Royal, Bath, and acquired and renovated the
entire French hamlet of Le Grand Blanc in the Basses-Alpes with the
intention of creating a retreat for thinkers and intellectuals.
In the grounds below the
manor’s terrace the Frys and their royal guests would go motorcycle
scrambling. After his divorce Fry was compelled to sell Widcombe. He
later lived in the Royal Crescent for a time before moving out of Bath to
the village of Freshford nearby. Fry supported many projects in Bath, in 1979 he bought
the Theatre Royal and transformed
it into a popular venue that was formally reopened by Princess Margaret
three years later. He was chairman of Northern Ballet Theatre and the Arnolfini in Bristol. He stepped down as chairman of Rotork in 1985 and
from 1992 had lived on his 150-acre plantation in the Cardamom Hills in Kerala, southern India, growing tea and cardamom and enjoying his fine
collection of art. Jeremy Fry died on 18th June 2005, aged 81. |