Margaret Barbour

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Dame Margaret Barbour DBE DL (née Davies; born February 1940[1]) is a British businesswoman and philanthropist best known as the current Chairman of J. Barbour & Sons.

Together with her daughter, Helen Barbour, she established the Women's Fund in 1999 to encourage and support women within Tyne & Wear and Northumberland to develop their full potential.[2] In 2000, in memory of her mother in law, Barbour set up The Nancy Barbour Award, an award within the Women's Fund that recognises organisations helping women to play a more active part in the community, particularly those who work with a disability.[3][4]

Born Margaret Davies in 1940, she was married to the late John Malcolm Barbour (who died in 1968) whose ancestor, John Barbour, had founded the clothing firm J. Barbour & Sons in 1894. She has one daughter, Helen Mary Barbour. She has held the office of Company Chairman of J. Barbour & Sons since 1972.[3] She remarried in 1991.

Business background

A teacher originally, she is credited as "[having] reinvented the waterproof wax clothes firm, J. Barbour & Sons". She turned the company's rustic clothes, initially designed for seamen, river workers, motorcyclists and Royal Navy submariners, into "a fashion accessory for the 1980s Sloane Rangers and the British upper-class country set."[5]

She then turned the rural brand into an international urban fashion icon in the 40 countries where it is represented through the company's local offices and network of retailers and distributors.[6]

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