Sara Barker
{{Short description|British political administrator}}
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Dame Sara Elizabeth Barker {{post-nominals|country=GBR|DBE}} (15 February 1904 – 19 September 1973) was a British political administrator, prominent in the Labour Party.
Early life
Born in the West Riding of Yorkshire, Barker's father was an Independent Labour Party activist and served a term as Mayor of Halifax. Barker studied at Halifax Technical College, and with the Workers Educational Association, and became active in the Labour Party. At the age of sixteen, she became the women's officer for the local branch of the party.[http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/53249 Dame Sara Elizabeth Barker profile], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; accessed 30 March 2014.
In 1935, Barker was appointed as secretary and agent for the Halifax branch of the Labour Party, and she gradually rose to prominence, becoming the party's Yorkshire women's officer in 1942, assistant national agent in 1951, and Chief Women's Officer in 1960. In 1962, she became National Agent for the party, the first women to hold this post.
In 1968, she served as Acting General Secretary, following the resignation of Len Williams, and until Harry Nicholas was appointed.Lucy Middleton, Women in the Labour Movement: The British Experience, pp. 157, 203.
She retired from her posts in 1969, and was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire the following year.
References
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{{succession box|title=Labour Party Assistant National Agent|before=Leonard Williams|after=Reg Underhill|years=1951–1960}}
{{succession box|before=Mary Sutherland|title=Labour Party Chief Women's Officer|after=Constance Kay|years=1960–1962}}
{{succession box|before=Len Williams|title=Labour Party National Agent|after=Ron Hayward|years=1962–1969}}
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Category:Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire