Herbert Gladstone McDavid
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Sir Herbert Gladstone "Mac" McDavid CBE MSM | |
|---|---|
| Born | 19 May 1898 Liverpool, England |
| Died | 14 October 1966 (aged 68) London, England |
| Employer(s) | Glen Line, Alfred Holt & Co |
| Known for | shipping company senior executive and war-time government minister and advisor |
Sir Herbert Gladstone "Mac" McDavid CBE MSM (1898–1966) was from Liverpool, UK. He was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal in the First World War. He ultimately became chairman, managing director and partner of shipping companies (Glen Line, Alfred Holt & Co), deputy director of sea transport in the UK Ministry of War Transport during the Second World War and was knighted for organising shipping during the Suez Crisis in 1956.[1]
Herbert Gladstone McDavid was born in Liverpool on 19 May 1898.[2] His parents were Denis and Octavia (née Christian) McDavid. He was the eldest of their five children. His father worked as a tailor's cutter. His maternal grandfather, Jacob Christian, was a ship's steward from Antigua who had settled in Liverpool.
McDavid was educated at the Liverpool Institute and started working for Alfred Holt & Company in 1915, where two of his maternal uncles were also employed.[1]
In the First World War, McDavid enlisted when he was 18 in 1916 and was initially in the UK in the Army Reserve and then Liverpool Scottish Battalion.[2] In May 1917 he was sent to France and was rapidly made a prisoner of war. He learnt German to become an interpreter, failed in an escape attempt and became involved in running the prison camp.[1]
McDavid did not marry. He was ill from the early 1950s onwards. He died in London on 14 October 1966.[1]