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  1. Pym, Francis Leslie (13 Feb. 1922) (b. Abergavenny, 13 Feb. 1922; d. Everton Park, Sandy, Bedfordshire, 7 March 2008)British; Defence Secretary 1979–81, Foreign Secretary 1982–3; Baron (life peer) 1987 The son of a Conservative MP, Pym was educated at Eton and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He saw war service in Africa and Italy and was ...

  2. 8 de mar. de 2008 · Francis Leslie Pym was born in 1922 into an old landed family. His father, Leslie, sat for Parliament as a Conservative, holding what amounted to a family seat. Francis, educated at Eton and Magdalene College, Cambridge (of which he became an honorary Fellow in 1979), spent his early adult years - as he put it himself - “pottering about”.

  3. View the profiles of people named Francis Pym. Join Facebook to connect with Francis Pym and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  4. Francis Leslie Pym was born in Penpergwm, near Abergavenny, in Wales on 13 February 1922, the son of a landowner who became Conservative MP for Monmouth in 1942. Leslie Ruthven Pym became a whip, but his period in the House of Commons was brief: he was defeated in the Labour landslide of 1945.

  5. Francis Pym was born in 1922 and educated at Eton and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He was a Conservative MP representing the constituencies of Cambridgeshire (1961-83) and South East Cambridgeshire (1983-87). He served as Opposition Whip (1964-70), Government Chief Whip (1970-73), Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (1973-74), Secretary of ...

  6. Francis Pym. Francis Pym (13 de febrero de 1922- 7 de marzo de 2008) fue un político conservador británico que sirvió en distintos puestos del Gabinete durante las décadas de 1970 y 1980. 1 . De joven, sirvió como capitán del Ejército Británico durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Y fue mencionado a los despachos al ser condecorado con la ...

  7. 18 de fev. de 2007 · Francis Pym’s cubist sculptural tour de force, completed in 1971, is internationally renowned for its daring and prescient splicing together of old and new and for what the architectural historian David Evans calls the “almost barbaric power of its great cubic projections and cantilevers, brooding over the conifers of the Botanic Gardens like a mastodon.”