Difference between revisions of "Thomas Boyd-Carpenter"

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'''Lt Gen The Hon Sir [[Thomas Boyd-Carpenter]] KBE:''' Was Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion, Scots Guards between (1979-81). He was Commander of the 24 Infantry Brigade between (1983-84). he was Cheif of Staff of the British Army on the Rhine (1988-89) and his final post was Deputy Chief of Defence Staff (Programmes and Personnel) in the Ministry of Defence.  He was invested as a Knight Commander, Order of the British Empire (K.B.E.) in 1993. He retired from the military in 1996. He is chair of the Government's [[Social Security Advisory Committee]] [http://www.ssac.org.uk/pdf/ssac17.pdf] and the [[Rail Regulator]] [http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pdf/annrep97.pdf] He is Chairman of [[Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Trust]], Chairman of the [[Lord Chancellor's Advisory Board on Family Law]] and works as a senior consultant with the management communications company [[People in Business]] [http://www.pib.co.uk/about.asp] which works with [[BP]], [[British Airways]], [[Coca-Cola]], [[Glaxo SmithKline]], [[Manganese Bronz]], [[Manpower]], [[Premier Oil]], [[Unilever]] and others.  He has family connections to Sarah Hogg (head of the prime Minister's Policy unit since 1990).
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'''Lt Gen The Hon Sir [[Thomas Boyd-Carpenter]] KBE''' was Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion, Scots Guards between (1979-81). He was Commander of the 24 Infantry Brigade between (1983-84). He was Chief of Staff of the British Army on the Rhine (1988-89) and his final post was Deputy Chief of Defence Staff (Programmes and Personnel) in the Ministry of Defence.  He was invested as a Knight Commander, Order of the British Empire (K.B.E.) in 1993. He retired from the military in 1996. He is chair of the Government's [[Social Security Advisory Committee]] <ref>"[http://www.ssac.org.uk/pdf/ssac17.pdf Social Security Advisory Committee: Seventeenth Report 2004]", Social Security Advisory Committee website, accessed November 2008</ref> and the [[Rail Regulator]].<ref>"[http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pdf/annrep97.pdf Annual Report 1997-1998: Regulating the railway in the public interest]", Office of Rail Regulation website, accessed November 2008</ref>  He is Chairman of [[Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Trust]], Chairman of the [[Lord Chancellor's Advisory Board on Family Law]] and works as a senior consultant with the management communications company [[People in Business]]<ref>"[http://www.pib.co.uk/about.asp About Us]", People in Business website, accessed November 2008</ref> which works with [[BP]], [[British Airways]], [[Coca-Cola]], [[Glaxo SmithKline]], [[Manganese Bronz]], [[Manpower]], [[Premier Oil]], [[Unilever]] and others.  He is the brother of [[Sarah Hogg]] (head of the Prime Minister's Policy Unit from 1990-97).
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==Notes==
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<references/>

Latest revision as of 12:39, 2 November 2008

Lt Gen The Hon Sir Thomas Boyd-Carpenter KBE was Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion, Scots Guards between (1979-81). He was Commander of the 24 Infantry Brigade between (1983-84). He was Chief of Staff of the British Army on the Rhine (1988-89) and his final post was Deputy Chief of Defence Staff (Programmes and Personnel) in the Ministry of Defence. He was invested as a Knight Commander, Order of the British Empire (K.B.E.) in 1993. He retired from the military in 1996. He is chair of the Government's Social Security Advisory Committee [1] and the Rail Regulator.[2] He is Chairman of Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Trust, Chairman of the Lord Chancellor's Advisory Board on Family Law and works as a senior consultant with the management communications company People in Business[3] which works with BP, British Airways, Coca-Cola, Glaxo SmithKline, Manganese Bronz, Manpower, Premier Oil, Unilever and others. He is the brother of Sarah Hogg (head of the Prime Minister's Policy Unit from 1990-97).


Notes

  1. "Social Security Advisory Committee: Seventeenth Report 2004", Social Security Advisory Committee website, accessed November 2008
  2. "Annual Report 1997-1998: Regulating the railway in the public interest", Office of Rail Regulation website, accessed November 2008
  3. "About Us", People in Business website, accessed November 2008