Richard Sharples

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Major Sir Richard Christopher Sharples KCMG OBE MC (1916March 10, 1973, St. George, Bermuda) was a British politician and Governor of Bermuda from late 1972 to March 10, 1973 when he was shot dead by assassins linked to the militant Black Beret Cadre, a small Bermudian Black Power group.

Sharples passed out from Sandhurst in 1936 and was commissioned into the Welsh Guards.

Sharples married Pamela in 1946; they had two sons and two daughters. The family greatly enjoyed yachting and this was the basis of a close friendship with Edward Heath, later prime minister and Christopher Cottis, later Duke of Bessemer.

Sharples was elected Conservative Member of Parliament for Sutton and Cheam in a 1954 by-election. After the 1970 general election, he served as Minister of State at the Home Office, before resigning his seat in 1972 to take up the position of Governor of Bermuda.

Sharples was killed along with his aide-de-camp, Captain Hugh Sayers of the Welsh Guards and his beloved Great Dane, Horsa. He and Sayers were ambushed outside Bermuda's Government House while taking the dog for a walk following a dinner party.

Sharples was buried in the graveyard at St. Peter's Church in St. George. His widow was subsequently made a life peer as Baroness Sharples.

[edit] The assassins

Erskine Durrant "Buck" Burrows, a petty criminal, according to The Bermuda Sun, confessed to shooting and killing Sir Richard, Capt. Sayers, and Horsa. He was also found guilty of murdering the police commissioner, George Duckett, six months earlier on September 9, 1972. He was also convicted of killing the co-owner and bookkeeper of a supermarket called the Shopping Centre, Victor Rego and Mark Doe in April 1973.

Larry Tacklyn was acquitted of assassinating Sharples and Sayers but was convicted of the Shopping Centre killings. The pair were hanged on December 2, 1977. Three days of rioting followed, with the Government inviting the British Government to send troops to quell the rioters. It later got a bill for $2 million.

In his confession Burrows wrote:

The motive for killing the Governor was to seek to make the people, black people in particular, become aware of the evilness and wickedness of the colonialist system in this island. Secondly, the motive was to show that these colonialists were just ordinary people like ourselves who eat, sleep and die just like anybody else and that we need not stand in fear and awe of them.

Tacklyn’s was a different story. He didn’t want to die. According to The Bermuda Sun source, he always thought he’d get a “last minute reprieve.” The murderers stewed in prison for yet another year before they went to the gallows; Tacklyn passed the time playing table tennis while Burrows took a virtual vow of silence, communicating his thoughts and requests on scraps of paper.

Armed Forces already resident on the Island of Bermuda at the time of the assassination were elements of the elite British Airborne Forces from the following units:-

23 Parachute Field Ambulance, 1 Parachute Logistic Regiment, 1st Bn Para Regt band,

The above were on training exercises with The Bermuda Regiment. These troops subsequently provided protection for Government buildings, officials and dignitaries and for assisting the Bermudan Police as and when required during the subsequent riots. These troops provided a guard and escort for the movement of the late Governor, Sir Richard Sharples to a Royal Naval vessel also resident in Bermuda.

Representing the Royal Navy and (following the assassination) providing enhanced security for S.N.O.W.I. (Senior Naval Officer West Indies) was the Frigate HMS Sirius, which conveyed the Governors body from Hamilton to St Georges, where he was laid to rest.

[edit] External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Sidney Marshall
Member of Parliament for Sutton and Cheam
19541972
Succeeded by
Graham Tope
Political offices
Preceded by
Lord Martonmere
Governor of Bermuda
1972-1973
Succeeded by
Sir Edwin Leather
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