Sir John Maxwell Bemrose, known as Sir Max Bemrose, was an English industrialist, politician, and county officer for Derbyshire.
Background
The younger son of Doctor Henry Howe Bemrose, of Derby, and the grandson of Sir Henry Howe Bemrose (1827–1911), who in the 1890s had been member of parliament for Derby, Bemrose was educated at Derby School, Brighton College. And Clare College, Cambridge, where he graduated Bachelor and Master of Arts in the school of Economics.
Career
Bemrose joined the family printing firm, Bemrose Corporation Limited, in 1926, and was a director of the firm from 1938 to 1979 and its chairman, 1953 to 1978. He chaired the national Printing and Publishing Industry Training Board from 1972 to 1977 and was twice President of the British Federation of Master Printers, in 1967–1968 and again in 1971–1972. In 1950, he contested Watford for the Conservatives.
He was knighted in the 1960 Queen"s Birthday Appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Derbyshire in 1967, he served as.
Bemrose School, in Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was named after the Bemrose family to mark its services to education. In Who"s Who 1986, his recreations were stated as "music, gardening", his address as Old Barn House, Nether Lane, Hazelwood, Derbyshire, and his clubs as the Carlton and the Lansdowne.
Bemrose himself died in 1986, but his widow survived him for many years, celebrating her hundredth birthday on 7 May 2008. Knighted, 1960 Queen"s Birthday.
Politics
In Conservative politics, Bemrose became prospective parliamentary candidate for Derby in 1938 and there fought the General Election of 1945. He served as the party"s chairman for its East Midlands Provincial Area from 1957 to 1961 and chaired the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations in 1964–1965.
Views
Quotations:
"When we visited Egypt, I had to restrain my husband from diving into the Nile.".