Dorothy Dunlop

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Dorothy Dunlop
Deputy Lord Mayor of Belfast
In office
1978–1979
Preceded byVacant
Succeeded byVacant
Member of Belfast City Council
In office
17 May 1989 – 19 May 1993
Preceded byFrank Leslie
Succeeded byRobert Cleland
ConstituencyPottinger
In office
15 May 1985 – 17 May 1989
Preceded byDistrict created
Succeeded byAlan Montgomery
ConstituencyVictoria
In office
1975 – 20 May 1981
Preceded byWilliam Corry
Succeeded byWilliam Corry
ConstituencyBelfast Area B
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for East Belfast
In office
20 October 1982 – 1986
Personal details
Born1929
Dublin, Ireland
Died16 October 2021
Political partyNI Conservative (from 1992)
Independent Unionist (1989 - 1992)
Other political
affiliations
Ulster Unionist (until 1989)

Dorothy Dunlop (1929 – 16 October 2021) was a Northern Irish unionist politician, active in East Belfast.

Background[edit]

She was born in Dublin in 1929, but her family moved to Belfast when she was just four, after her father, Gilbert Waterhouse, accepted the position of Professor of German at Queen's University. She later completed a BA in English at Queen's, where she met and later married her husband, Samuel Dunlop.[1]

Dunlop worked in the Arts Council in London and for BBC Northern Ireland. After her marriage, she worked as a teacher in various schools and for the Prison Education Service.[2]

She was first elected as an Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) member of Belfast City Council in a by-election in 1975 for 'Area B' (the forerunner to the 'Victoria' electoral area). She was re-elected in 1977 and served as Deputy Lord Mayor in 1978–79. She lost her council seat to the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) in 1981.[3]

In 1982 she was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly, one of only three women to win a seat. In 1985 she regained her seat on Belfast City Council, representing the 'Pottinger' area and became chairwoman of East Belfast Unionist Association. On the moderate wing of the UUP, she was critical of the party's electoral pact with the DUP[4] and with Unionist demonstrations at Belfast's Saint Anne's Cathedral[5] against the Anglo-Irish Agreement.

She left the UUP, but retained a sufficient personal vote to hold her council seat in 1989 as an independent Unionist[6] and to retain her deposit with over 2000 votes in East Belfast in the 1992 Westminster election.[7] Shortly afterwards, she joined the Conservative Party, becoming Area Chairwoman 1995–97.

Her political career came to an end when she lost her council seat in the 1993 Local Government elections, her last electoral contest being the 1996 Forum election where she failed to win a seat in Belfast East.[8]

She had four children and seven grandchildren.

She died on 16 October 2021, aged 92.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Dorothy Dunlop - QUB".
  2. ^ Conservative Women's Organisation bio
  3. ^ Local Government Elections 1973 – 1981: Belfast
  4. ^ Biodata (cache version)
  5. ^ Biodata, ibid.
  6. ^ Local Government Elections 1985–1989: Belfast
  7. ^ East Belfast, 1983–1992
  8. ^ 1996 Candidates – East Belfast
  9. ^ "Dorothy Dunlop - QUB".
Civic offices
Vacant
Title last held by
Grace Bannister
Deputy Lord Mayor of Belfast
1978–1979
Vacant
Title next held by
Frank Millar
Northern Ireland Assembly (1982)
New assembly MPA for East Belfast
1982–1986
Assembly abolished