Tom Hatherley Pear (22 March 1886 – 14 May 1972) was a British psychologist. He was the first professor of psychology in England. He was president of the British Psychological Society.[1]
Tom Hatherley Pear was born in Walpole, Norfolk, 22 March 1886 the oldest son of Alfred John and Mary Ann Pear. He undertook tertiary education and gained an M.A and B.Sc.
Pear was actively involved in the system of assisting refugees and the family home became a safe house during the Kindertransport. Many of those who passed through on their way to the US or who stayed in the UK became long term family friends. A professor from Utrecht was found a lecturing post at Manchester University, before he too went to the US.
In 1917 Pear and co-author the Australian-born anatomist Grafton Elliot Smith show had worked with Ronald Rows at Maghull Military Hospital, proposed in Shell-Shock and its Lessons the idea that ordinary people could benefit from techniques used in treating the soldiers: 'If the lessons of war are to be truly beneficial, much more extensive application must be made of these methods, not only for our soldiers now, but also for our civilian population for all time.'[3]
Pear was married to Catherine, who had a special interest in working-class housing in Manchester where they lived with their young family[4] They had two daughters and two sons; Richard, born 1916, political scientist and[4] Professor of American Politics at Nottingham University; and Brian, who was killed in the Second World War[5] when as a flail tank commander, he led the attack on his sector of the beach on D-Day and was killed in action later that year on the Meuse, when he interposed his tank between a damaged one and enemy fire to permit the crew of the former to escape. Daughters were Marjorie who was a very talented pianist and harpsichord player and married a barrister who rose to High Court Judge, and Stella, who married a GP, and served for several decades as a Magistrate on the Bench Adult and Juvenile, in Grimsby and latterly in Bradford.
Grafton Elliot Smith; Pear, Tom Hatherley, 1886- (1917), Shell shock and its lessons (2d ed.), Manchester University Press{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
Pear, T. H. (1948). The Relations between Psychology and Sociology ... Reprinted from the "Bulletin of the John Rylands Library," etc. Manchester.
Pear, T. H; Pear, T. H; United Nations Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (1950), Psychological factors of peace and war, Published on behalf of the United Nations Association by Hutchinson
Pear, T. H., & British Broadcasting Corporation. (1930). 'Making work worth while'. London: British Broadcasting Corp.
Pear, T. H. (1937) transcription of 'Religion and contemporary psychology,' delivered before the University of Durham at Armstrong college, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in November 1936. London: Oxford University Press, H. Milford.
^PEAR, Prof. Tom Hatherley, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online ed., Oxford University Press, Dec 2007, accessed 29 Jan 2012
^Pear, T.H. “Reminiscences” (1959). Mimeo. Archives of the British Psychological Society. University of Liverpool.
^Grafton Elliot Smith; Pear, Tom Hatherley, 1886- (1917), Shell shock and its lessons (2d ed.), Manchester University Press{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^ ab[1] David Childs, Obiturary, The Independent, Wednesday 4 March 1998