Career
He led the Labour Party administration on Birmingham City Council from 1984 to 1993. Knowles was brought up in Kent and worked in the building industry from the age of 14. After brief service in the Royal Engineers during World World War II, he became a builder and shipbuilder in 1941.
In 1950 he became a trade union organiser in the building trade, working in Sevenoaks, Dover, Leeds and eventually ending up in Birmingham.
From 1971 he became national organiser of the Company-operative Party and began to consider a career in local government. He was elected to Birmingham City Council in 1972 and was swiftly made Chairman of the Planning Committee.
In 1974 he was elected as an Alderman and moved on to the Policy Committee, of which he was a member for three years until the Labour Party lost power. He also served on West Midlands County Council from 1973 to 1977.
In 1980 Knowles returned as Planning Committee chairman for two years.
Knowles played a key role in the transformation of Birmingham city centre during the late 1980s and early 1990s. He was influential in bringing about the International Convention Centre and Symphony Hall on Broad Street, which were to prove hugely important in the regeneration and reinvention of the city. He was Knighted in 1989.
Knowles was sued in 1990 by John Hemming over a leaflet which Hemming considered libellous.
Although Knowles had not written the leaflet, he had helped distribute it door-to-door. Knowles stood down from the leadership in 1993, being succeeded by Theresa Stewart and was made Lord Mayor of Birmingham in 1994.
He was defeated for re-election to the council in 2000. On 2 May 2007, the then British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, paid tribute to Dick Knowles"s contribution to the regeneration of Birmingham, during Prime Minister"s Questions at Westminster.
Mr Blair said: "He is somebody who did an immense amount for Birmingham.
One of the reasons Birmingham is such a vibrant and thriving European city is because of the work Dick Knowles did.". He was still politically active as a governor of University Hospital Birmingham National Health Service Foundation Trust well into his eighties. Knowles died of bladder cancer, aged 90.