Roger Holloway
Roger Holloway OBE (24 November 1933 – 31 October 2010) had many occupations during a colourful life, including: soldier, big game hunter, international wine and spirit merchant and Anglican priest. He was the youngest of six children of a civil servant. His family had a military tradition.
He was brought up in Blackheath and educated at Eastbourne College. For his National Service he was a platoon commander in Kenya during the emergency. After that he was assistant to a professional big game hunter.
He then went up to Selwyn College, Cambridge to read Theology with a view to ordination. However he had difficulties with his faith at that time and joined Pfizer as a salesman and brand manager. In 1960 he moved to the advertising agency Robert Sharp and Partners running the Players and Unilever accounts. In 1963 went into the wine business of Charington United Breweries Group (later Bass Charrington). He then moved to Jardine Matheson where, from 1982 to 1988 he was managing director of wines and spirits.This was one of the most profitable divisions of Jardine Matheson with the majority of its revenues being derived from sales to Japan. Roger Holloway, lived in Japan for some years and was the manager who developed this growing division for Jardine's.
Meanwhile, he had been ordained priest in 1981, as a protégé of Robert Runcie. In Asia in addition to his work with Jardine Matheson he served as honorary chaplain at St. John's Cathedral in Hong Kong, as honorary assistant at St. Alban's Church, Tokyo, and as Episcopalian Chaplain at the US military base at Camp Zama.[1]
In 1988 he settled in London and became a full-time priest at St Margaret's, Westminster and also appeals director of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund and Director of the Industrial Christian Fellowship. In 1997 he was elected Preacher to Gray's Inn, continuing until his death. Also in 1997 he was appointed OBE "for services to the whisky industry". With this description, The Queen was surprised to see him in clerical dress!
He married in 1962, Anne Alsop, who survives him with three sons and a daughter.[2]
References
- ↑ Holloway, Roger (2012). REVD ROGER HOLLOWAY OBE MA: a collection of favourite sermons preached in the chapel of Gray's Inn 1997 - 2010. Bloomington, IN. p. xi. ISBN 978-1-4685-7942-0.
- ↑ Obituary, The Daily Telegraph, 16 Nov 2010.