Dame Mary Eugenia Charles

Dame Eugenia CharlesDame Mary Eugenia Charles, Prime Minister, lawyer, politician and journalist who died in Martinique on Tuesday 6 September 2005 was born May 15, 1919 at Pointe Michel village on the south-west coast of Dominica.
She was educated at the Convent High School, Roseau, and St. Joseph's Convent, Grenada. She read law at University of Toronto and was called to the Bar at the Inner Temple, London in 1949. She began private practice in Dominica that year. She wrote anonymous articles for the Herald and later the Star newspapers that were highly critical of the ruling Dominica Labour Party (DLP). When the government reacted she was in the vanguard of those who founded the Dominica Freedom Party (DFP) in 1968 following demonstrations against the passing of Seditious and Undesirable Publications Act in July by the DLP, then under the premiership of E.O. Le Blanc. She failed to win the Roseau north seat in the general election of 1970 contesting against Patrick John, but entered the House of Assembly as a Nominated Member that year. Charle meets ThatchersIn 1991 she was knighted as Dame of the Order of Bath by Queen Elizabeth II at Harare, Zimbabwe during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Conference. She retired from the House of Assembly in 1995 and her Dominica Freedom Party lost the general elections of that year after fifteen years in power. During that time the country rose to an economic peak in 1988 but the momentum was not maintained and by 1993 there was evidence of the beginning of an economic decline due mainly to changes in international trade affecting the banana industry, the reduction of foreign aided projects and the economics of scale in relation to small independent island states.
Eugenia Charles meets Ronal Reagan Conflict over her domination of the cabinet and her views on a successor marred the last two years of her leadership. Her firm and forthright character and clear cut opinions were seen by some to be abrasive and she made many enemies but her admirers cited these as the only means by which to accomplish results under difficult circumstances. Dame Eugenia was best known outside of Dominica for her staunch anti-communism during the last years of the Cold War in the Caribbean and, as Chairman of the OECS, for leading the invitation to the United States government under President Ronald Reagan to invade Grenada in October 1983. For this she was often referred to as 'The Iron Lady of the Caribbean'.
Dame Eugenia meets Pope Following her retirement in 1995 she watched from the sidelines as the fortunes of the Dominica Freedom Party rapidly declined under new leadership, eventually loosing all of its seats in the House of Assembly at the general elections of 2005. By then, Dame Eugenia's memory and mental capacity to absorb what was going on around her was fading and in the opinion to some close to her, she had lost the will to live by the time she fell and fractured her left hip on 27 August 2005 and was flown to Martinique for treatment. Her passing removes yet another of the giants of Caribbean leadership who were active in the latter part of the 20th century.




Source:  http://www.lennoxhonychurch.com/article.cfm?id=434

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