Ossie O'Brien

Politician

1928 – 1997

11

Who was Ossie O'Brien?

Oswald O'Brien was a British and European Labour Co-operative politician.

He was born Oswald O'Brien into a family of a disabled First World War soldier and mill worker mother in 1928, in Darlington. From St Mary's Catholic Grammar School he went to Fircroft College, Birmingham and St Cuthbert's Society in the University of Durham after service in the Royal Navy which he volunteered for lying about his age by one year to relieve economic pressure on his family.

O'Brien was a British European and International politician committed to nuclear disarmament, equality and liberation politics, self-described Teacher at Durham University, Director of Studies of the Co-operative College, Workplace Director of Alcohol Concern, Member Commission of Industrial Relations, Workers Educational Association, and European International Consultant on Workers Rights, Economics and Security.

O'Brien was elected Member of Parliament for Darlington in the March 1983 by-election following the death of Edward Fletcher. In the general election held just three months later, he lost the seat to the Conservative party candidate Michael Fallon, who had been his rival in the by-election. He never re-entered the British Parliament.

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Born
Apr 6, 1928
Darlington
Died
Mar 10, 1997

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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