Malcolm Patrick Murray
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Malcolm Patrick Murray CB (10 July 1905 – 21 July 1979) was a British civil servant in the Air Ministry, the Special Operations Executive and the Ministry of Fuel and Power.


Biography

Murray was born in Roehampton, London. He attended Uppingham School and Exeter College Oxford where he took a degree in Modern History and Jurisprudence. Murray joined the civil service in 1929 as an Assistant Principal in the Air Ministry, and was Private Secretary to the Permanent Secretary of the Air Ministry from 1931-1937. He graduated from the Imperial Defence College in 1938.''Who Was Who'', Murray, (Malcolm) Patrick. https://doi.org/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U157868 published online 01 December 2007. Murray was recruited by
Lord Selborne Earl of Selborne, in the County of Southampton, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1882 for the lawyer and Liberal politician Roundell Palmer, 1st Baron Selborne, along with the subsidiary title of Viscount Wo ...
into the
Special Operations Executive The Special Operations Executive (SOE) was a secret British World War II organisation. It was officially formed on 22 July 1940 under Minister of Economic Warfare Hugh Dalton, from the amalgamation of three existing secret organisations. Its pu ...
in November 1943 to work in the Vice-Chief's office as an officer on special duties at London HQ.The National Archives, HS 9/1079/2 He became an Administrative Head organising sabotage and resistance in occupied countries during the Second World War. His service number was 15724, and his classification symbol was V/CD2 from November 1943 and D/CD from January 1944. After the war he was Under Secretary in the
Ministry of Fuel and Power The Ministry of Power was a United Kingdom government ministry dealing with issues concerning energy. The Ministry of Power (then named Ministry of Fuel and Power) was created on 11 June 1942 from functions separated from the Board of Trade. ...
from 1946. Murray was head of the Electricity Division of the Ministry for the exceptionally long period from 1947 to 1959, therefore during the nationalisation of the electricity industry in 1948, and the early stages of the development of the British civil nuclear power programme in the late 1950s. At the suggestion of Lord Citrine, the chairman of the
British Electricity Authority The British Electricity Authority (BEA) was established as the central British electricity authority in 1948 under the nationalisation of Great Britain's electricity supply industry enacted by the Electricity Act 1947. The BEA was responsible for ...
(BEA), Murray attended the majority of the meetings between the BEA and the Area Board chairmen. He was thus able to convey government thinking to them informally, while sometimes receiving information off the record and relaying signals back to Whitehall. The sponsorship role of the Electricity Division led to Murray becoming not so much a controller of the industry as an honest broker between the central Authority and the Whitehall machine generally. In 1957 in discussions between the Minister of Power and the Country Landowner's Association the issue was raised whether a public inquiry should be held on any application from the
Central Electricity Authority The Central Electricity Authority (CEA) was a body that managed and operated the electricity supply industry in England and Wales between 1 April 1955 and 31 December 1957. The CEA replaced the earlier British Electricity Authority (BEA) as a r ...
. The Electricity Bill was then being debated in Parliament and the issue might be included in the Bill. Murray was sceptical whether anything would be achieved. The Minister advised there was insufficient time to introduce such measures. Leslie Hannah notes that Murray was 'now not a well man' and had less influence on electricity matters than his fellow under-secretaries Owen Francis from the gas division who had been instrumental in drafting the 1957 Electricity Bill and the economist Philip Chantler. In 1959 Murray was Under-Secretary of the Electricity Division of the Ministry of Power under the Minister Lord Mills. Following the Public Inquiry into the proposed power station at Holme Pierrepoint, the Planning Inspector rejected the proposal. There was unanimous support for the report within the Ministry of Power. Murray minuted that even if the estimated cost of coal haulage of £600,000 per year was greater at any other site, as estimated by the CEGB, this was only 1 per cent of the annual cost of running the station. Murray was Director of Establishments Ministry of Power 1959-61 and Deputy Secretary Ministry of Power 1961-65. He retired from the civil service in 1965.


Personal life

He married Betty Violet Black (b. 2 January 1909, daughter of Algernon Murray Black) on 11 August 1934 at Petersham parish church, Surrey.General Register Office, ''Marriage certificate'', Registration District: Surrey North Eastern, vol. 2a page 165. She died in 1955. He secondly married Maisie Nora (Susan) Salmond (daughter of Walter Hemmingway) on 16 January 1956 at the register office Hampstead, London. In 1943 he listed his recreational interests as walking, rugby football, tennis, rowing and brick laying. His residences included Annery, Roehampton, London (1934); Corners, Bramley near Guildford, Surrey (1939–43); Scotsland, Bramley, Surrey; 1 Greville Place, Maida Vale, London NW6 (1956); Gorbio, France (1966), 26 Templemere, Oatlands Drive, Weybridge, Surrey (1978), and finally at Gorley Green Cottage, South Gorley, Fordingbridge, Hampshire where he died. He made his Will on 13 April 1978.HM Courts and Tribunals Service, ''Will'' dated 13 April 1978, ''Grant of Probate'' dated 7 November 1979, Probate Winchester 7 November 1979 (No. 793315959T). He died of carcinomatosis and carcinoma of the colon.General Register Office, ''Death certificate'', Registration District: Ringwood & Fordingbridge, vol. 20 page 837. At his death his estate was valued at £18478.


See also

*
Oswyn Alexander Ruthven Murray Sir Oswyn Alexander Ruthven Murray (17 August 1873 – 10 July 1936) was a British civil servant who spent most of his career at the Admiralty, eventually serving as Permanent Secretary from 1917 until 1936. Biography Murray was born in Mill H ...
(father) *
Oswyn Murray Oswyn Murray (born 26 March 1937) is a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford University and a distinguished classical scholar. Murray is joint editor with John Boardman and Jasper Griffin of the ''Oxford History of the Classical World''. Boris Jo ...
(son)


References


External links


Oswyn Murray biography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Murray, Malcolm Patrick 1905 births 1979 deaths 20th-century British civil servants