Anthony MacGregor Grier was born on 12 April 1911 to the Very Rev.
Alexander Roy MacGregor Grier. He attended
St Edward's School in
Oxford, and
Exeter College, Oxford, and served in the
West African Frontier Force and the
Sierra Leone Regiment before entering the
Colonial Administrative Service in
Sierra Leone in 1935. After serving with the
Colonial Office in
London and
Delhi between 1943 and 1947, he was stationed in
North Borneo as a district officer until 1964, and was appointed a
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1963. He returned to the
United Kingdom in 1964 to be general manager of the
Redditch Development Corporation, serving until 1976; the year after he left that post, he was elected to
Hereford and Worcester County Council for the
Conservatives. He left public office in 1985 and died on 22 December 1989, leaving a widow (Patricia, daughter of
Lord Spens) and three children. During his time in Redditch, he managed its development into a
New Town accommodating over 100,000 people, mostly "
overspill" from
Birmingham. His time in the town was controversial, with
The Times reporting that some locals accused Grier of being an "old colonial" who regarded inhabitants as "the natives"; however, he considered his work there as one of his greatest achievements and stayed in the area when he retired. == References ==