Jack Hayward

For the English writer and academic, see Jack Hayward (political scientist).
For other people named John Hayward, see John Hayward (disambiguation).
Sir Jack Hayward
OBE
Born Jack Arnold Hayward
(1923-06-14)14 June 1923
Wolverhampton, United Kingdom
Died 13 January 2015(2015-01-13) (aged 91)
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, U.S.
Nationality British
Known for Owner of Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. (1990–2007)
Predecessor Gallagher Estates
Successor Steve Morgan

Sir Jack Arnold Hayward OBE (14 June 1923 – 13 January 2015) was an English businessman, property developer, philanthropist and president of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Biography

Early life

Stowe School

Hayward was born in the Whitmore Reans area of Wolverhampton and, having failed the entrance exam for Wolverhampton Grammar School, educated at Northaw Preparatory School and later Stowe School in Buckingham.[1] At the outbreak of the Second World War, he cycled to Oxford to volunteer for the cause, eventually joining the Royal Air Force, and going on to receive flight training in Yorkshire and Clewiston, Florida. He served first as a Pilot Officer in the Royal Air Force 671 Squadron S.E. Asia Command in India, flying Dakota transporters to the 14th Army in Burma, and in 1946 was demobilised as a Flight Lieutenant.[2]

Career

After demobilization he began work in Rotary Hoes, part of the Firth Cleveland Group of Companies formed by his father, Sir Charles Hayward, as an agricultural equipment salesman in South Africa. In 1951 he founded the American arm of the Group in New York, where he was based for five years before relocating to the Bahamas as it was a sterling area.[2] His father began the family involvement with the Bahamas during the 1950s, after relocating his business from the United States. Jack arrived in Grand Bahama in 1956 and became a Vice-President of The Grand Bahama Port Authority, which helped promote the development of Freeport. Jack took over his father's interests in the Bahamas, and continued to play an active role in Freeport.

In addition to his home in Freeport, within Britain he owned a farm in Sussex in England and was Laird of Dunmaglass, a 14,000-acre estate near Inverness in Scotland.[2] The Sunday Times Rich List placed him as 125th richest in Britain with an estimated £160million fortune in 2009.

Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C.

Hayward twice could have become owner of his boyhood football club Wolverhampton Wanderers, whom he had first watched aged 5. In 1982, when Wolves were in financial difficulties, he was reportedly offered 400 shares for around £40,000 but declined to buy them. When Wolves went into receivership later that year, Hayward was reportedly behind one of the consortia interested in buying the club, but it was ultimately bought by the Bhatti brothers in an unsuccessful rescue attempt fronted by former Wolves player Derek Dougan.[3]

Hayward became the owner and chairman of Wolves after buying the club in May 1990 for £2.11 million.[3] It is estimated that he spent well in excess of £70m of his personal finance on redeveloping their Molineux Stadium, writing off annual debts, and purchasing players for the club during the 17 years for which he was owner. His reign saw seven different managers employ his resources in attempts to make the club a top flight side. In the event, they only managed one season at the highest level (2003–04), despite his riches having enabled Wolves to invest in many players who would normally have been beyond the financial reach of non-Premier League clubs. In May 2007 it was announced that he had sold control of the club to businessman Steve Morgan for a nominal £10 fee, in exchange for a conditional £30m of investment in the club. Hayward had originally offered the club for sale in September 2003, but had struggled to find suitable takers. Morgan's takeover was formally completed on 9 August 2007. Hayward remained the life president of Wolverhampton Wanderers and was later inducted into the club's Hall of Fame.

By the time he retired as chairman at Molineux, Hayward was recognised as one of a select group of football benefactors who had spent huge fortunes of time and money on rescuing their hometown boyhood club from obscurity. Other such benefactors include Jack Walker (Blackburn Rovers), Lionel Pickering (Derby County), Steve Gibson (Middlesbrough) and Dave Whelan (Wigan Athletic).

Charity

Hayward was knighted in 1986 – adding to his 1968 OBE award – for his charitable actions, having donated money in 1969 to buy Lundy Island for the National Trust,[4] to buy the SS Great Britain and, more recently, £500,000 to the Vulcan to the Sky fund.[5] He also put funds into repairing the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital on the Falkland Islands after the Falklands War and was named as the mystery benefactor of £1 million to the South Atlantic Fund to aid families of British serviceman killed or injured in that war.[3]

He funded three international racing yachts Great Britain I, II and III, spent £100,000 on saving the sloop Gannet (the Royal Navy’s only survivor of the transition from sail to steam) and contributed another £100,000 to help raise the Mary Rose.[2] He financed tours of the West Indies by the England women's cricket team in 1969–70 and 1970–71, and in 1973 sponsored the first ever women's cricket World Cup (two years before the first World Cup in the men's game).[6]

Political associations

Hayward was a donor to the British Liberal Party during the 1970s, having in 1969 met their leader Jeremy Thorpe who was one of the West Country MPs who campaigned to get Lundy Island purchased for the nation. He backed the party in the October 1974 General Election campaign, enabling Thorpe to travel round the coast on hovercraft on speaking tours and the party to field a record number of parliamentary candidates (although only 13 MPs returned). Thorpe and his wife Marion were guests at Hayward's Bahamas home and Thorpe offered - unsuccessfully - to find a buyer for Freeport in return for payment when Hayward and his colleagues were considering selling. In 1979 Hayward gave evidence for the Crown in court when Thorpe was implicated in the Norman Scott case, letters from Thorpe that Hayward had kept being among exhibits.[2] Hayward was awarded £50,000 libel damages by the Sunday Telegraph after an article published in 1978 accused him of being 'paymaster' in the alleged conspiracy to murder Scott, of which Thorpe was cleared.[7] In later life (2013) Hayward boasted he would have founded a party "far more right wing than Margaret Thatcher".[8]

Style

Hayward was nicknamed "Union Jack" in the Bahamas media for his British patriotism. Into Freeport he imported ten red London buses and was permitted by the General Post Office to install British-style red telephone and pillar boxes. Visiting seamen from the Royal Navy were always given dinner at a local restaurant “with the compliments of Sir Jack”. Back in Britain, Hayward drove a Range Rover bearing the bumper sticker: “Buy abroad — sack a Brit”.[2] In Who's Who, he declared his recreations as, mainly, "promoting British endeavours, mainly in sport...protecting the British landscape, keeping all things bright, beautiful and British".[9]

With his crumpled clothes and pockets stuffed with bits of paper, it was observed of Hayward that he looked “more like an absent-minded retired geography teacher than one of the richest men in the world”. He relaxed by watching cricket (he was a life member of Surrey County Cricket Club) and taking part in amateur dramatics — he built a modern theatre at Freeport for the local Players’ Guild, of which he was a leading actor.[2] He banned non-British vehicles from his estate in Sussex and refused to drink French wine or mineral water.[3]

Family

Hayward married Jean Mary Forder in 1948 and had two sons, Rick and Jonathan, and a daughter Susan. Both his sons have also been involved with Wolves. Jonathan joined the board upon his father's takeover in 1990 and later served as chairman, before resigning in 1997. In 1999 his father controversially sued him for £237,000, claiming he was responsible for financial irregularities. The matter was settled out of court in favour of the elder Hayward. His elder son Rick later became chairman of the club in 2003 during the Premier League, taking over from his father, but stepped down in 2006. His grandson Rupert joined the board in the reshuffle following Steve Morgan's takeover but resigned a year later.

As of January 2011 Hayward was in a court battle for over £100 million of his own personal fortune, after being sued by his daughter Susan Heath, then aged 62, elder son Rick, 59, and six of his grandchildren after they had been removed as beneficiaries from trusts set up by him. The fallout between Hayward and his family started over the £10 sale of Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. to Steve Morgan.[10][11] Sir Jack died on 13 January 2015 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida aged 91.[12]

He was awarded the Freedom of the City of Wolverhampton on 9 July 2003.

Namesakes

The Sir Jack Hayward High School in Freeport, Bahamas, was named after him in 1998.[13]

Wolverhampton Wanderers' training complex at Compton, Wolverhampton is titled 'The Sir Jack Hayward' training ground. He also has a street, Jack Hayward Way beside the Molineux ground (previously Molineux Way), that was renamed in commemoration of his 80th birthday in 2003.

The Grand Bahama Highway Bridge, under construction as at January 2015, is to be renamed the Sir Jack Hayward Bridge. Hayward had campaigned for its building for ten years before it was launched with a contract signing ceremony in May 2014 at which Hayward was present.[14]

The South Bank of Molineux (known as the Jack Harris Stand at the time) was renamed the Sir Jack Hayward Stand after the death of Wolves' beloved previous owner. [15]

See also

References

  1. Sir Jack Hayward at 90: I still adore Wolves, Express & Star, 14 June 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Obituary, Daily Telegraph, 13 January 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Colourful life of a British eccentric". Shropshire Star. 14 January 2015. p. 8.Comment and Analysis article by Mark Andrews on Hayward following his death.
  4. Ternstrom, Myrtle (2014). "Lundy Field Society Annual Report 2014". Lundy Field Society Annual Report: 11.
  5. "England | Leicestershire | Club's owner was 'mystery' donor". BBC News. 2 September 2006. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  6. "When the women set the agenda". Content-usa.cricinfo.com. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  7. Express & Star, 14 January 2014, "Sir Jack Hayward, eccentric who loved his city"
  8. Article by Sathnam Sanghera, published in Financial Times.
  9. Who's Who, 2015. A and C Black. p. 1033. ISBN 978-1-408-18119-5.
  10. Peter Rhodes (16 November 2010). "Wolves saviour Sir Jack Hayward at war with family " Express & Star". Expressandstar.com. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  11. "Sir Jack Hayward: I've been demonised « Express & Star". Expressandstar.com. 10 January 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  12. "Sir Jack Hayward OBE passes away". Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. 13 January 2015.
  13. "Sir Jack Hayward High School website". Jackhaywardhighschool.org. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  14. Wolverhampton Express and Star, New bridge in Bahamas is to be named after Sir Jack Hayward, 20 January 2015.
  15. http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/wolves-molineux-stand-set-renamed-9202871
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