Terence Anthony Casey CBE (6 September 1920 – 18 March 1987) was a British trade union leader.
Casey was educated at Holy Cross School in Ramsgate, then qualified as a teacher at Camden College.[1] During World War II, he served with the Royal Army Education Corps as a teacher. From 1946, he worked at state schools in London, and he joined the National Association of Schoolmasters (NAS).[2] In 1956, he became the headteacher at St Joseph's School in Maida Vale. He became increasingly active in the National Association of Schoolmasters (NAS), and negotiated for it to have a representative on the Burnham Committee from 1961, a role he held from then until his retirement. He also served as the union's president in 1962/63.[1][2]
In 1963, Casey was elected as general secretary of the NAS.[1] In this role, he encouraged the formation of the Union of Women Teachers and developed a close alliance between the two, before in 1975, he led a strongly contested merger of the two unions.[3] He became general secretary of the new union, the National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT). From 1978, he also served as vice president of the International Federation of Free Teachers' Unions and treasurer of the European Teachers' Trade Union Committee.[1] He had a poor working relationship with Fred Jarvis, his opposite number at the rival National Union of Teachers.[4] Shirley Williams described Casey as "aggressively masculine" and believing that men had superior minds to women.[5]
Casey retired from his union posts in 1983, and served on committees including those of the Catholic Education Council and the Voluntary Sector Consultative Council.[1] He was appointed CBE in the 1977 New Year Honours.
References
edit- ^ a b c d e "Casey, Terency Anthony", Who Was Who
- ^ a b Trades Union Congress, "Obituary: Terence Casey, CBE", Report of the 119th Annual Trades Union Congress, p.349
- ^ Geoffrey Partington, Women Teachers in the Twentieth Century in England and Wales, p.86
- ^ Will Woodward, "In harmony?", The Guardian, 13 March 2001
- ^ Shirley Williams, Climbing the bookshelves