Official funeral honours Hugh Hart's service to law, mining, energy and tourism
Jamaica’s leaders, legal community and relatives gathered for the official funeral service of the Honourable Hugh Cecil Edmund Hart, OJ, remembering him as a lawyer, former senator, Cabinet minister and public servant whose work reached across mining, energy, tourism and regional commercial law.
Tributes at the service recalled Hart’s long contribution to the state, including his service as a senator, adviser on bauxite matters and minister with responsibility for mining, energy and later tourism. Speakers said his leadership came during difficult years for the bauxite and oil sectors, when Jamaica depended heavily on foreign exchange earnings and careful negotiations with overseas partners.
One tribute noted that Hart was appointed in the early 1980s after the Jamaica Labour Party formed government under Edward Seaga. He later became minister of mining and energy in 1983, with tourism added the following year. Speakers credited him with helping to protect jobs, support rural economies tied to bauxite operations and advance tourism targets, including the push towards one million visitors, achieved in 1987.
Hart was also remembered for major tourism and cultural initiatives, including bringing the Concorde aircraft to Jamaica in 1986 and supporting the staging of a major world music festival. Other speakers said his contacts helped Jamaica’s 1984 Olympic team and supported community programmes in West Kingston.
Legal colleagues described Hart as a gifted commercial lawyer, negotiator and problem solver. Hart Muirhead Fatta, the firm he founded in 1989 with John Muirhead and George Fatta, said he led as senior partner until becoming a consultant about two years before his death. Representatives of the Commonwealth Caribbean Bar Association also praised his work in Jamaica, Cayman and the wider region.
Beyond public office and law, the tributes focused on Hart’s humour, humility, pipe, love of horse racing and golf, and ease with people from every background. Family members, including Lorraine, Justin and Belinda, were thanked for sharing him with Jamaica. The service closed with prayers, hymns and reflections on faith, service and national duty.
Syndicated from Andrew Holness (Video) · originally published .
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