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* Lieutenant in the [[Royal Victorian Order]] in 1992.<ref name="TQS p308"/>
* Lieutenant in the [[Royal Victorian Order]] in 1992.<ref name="TQS p308"/>
* Fellow of the [[Royal Philatelic Society London]] in 2002.<ref name="TQS p309"/>
* Fellow of the [[Royal Philatelic Society London]] in 2002.<ref name="TQS p309"/>
* He received the Queen Elizabeth II Version of the [[Royal Household Long and Faithful Service Medal]] for 20 years of service to the [[British Royal Family]].


==References and sources==
==References and sources==

Revision as of 01:14, 8 November 2021

Surésh Dhargalkar[1] LVO RIBA FRPSL (c. 1934 – 9 April 2020)[2] was a British architect. He spent all his career at the service of the British monarchy: first to maintain the royal castles, then to help manage the Royal Philatelic Collection after 1996.

Biography

Dhargalkar was the superintending architect to the Royal Household from the 1970s to the 1990s.[3] In 1975, he fitted up as an adapted "stamp room" the space inside Buckingham Palace that was devoted to the collection since Keeper John Wilson in the late 1930s.[3] In 1992, he worked on the first repair after the fire in Windsor Castle.[3]

In April 1996, he was the first person ever hired to assist the Keeper of the Royal Philatelic Collection. Not a philatelist himself, he helped Keeper Charles Goodwyn and his adjoint Michael Sefi for simple tasks, such as keeping an eye on visitors consulting the collection and helping the Keeper throughout the Royal court and British government administrative lobbies.[4]

But he was consulted on conservation problems too. He revealed himself as a philatelic exhibition organizer. In 2002, he travelled to the British Virgin Islands with the 1867 "Missing Virgin" error stamp of this British territory.[5][6] The same year, he created for Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee an exhibition which travelled in the United Kingdom.[3]

In January 2003, when Sefi became Keeper of the Royal Collection, Surésh Dhargalkar was promoted to adjoint of the Keeper.[7] He ended his public service career at the Royal Library, in Windsor.[8]

Member of the Egypt Exploration Society, he helped on The Amarna Project directed by Barry Kemp.[8]

He died on 9 April 2020 at the age of 85.[8]

Honours and awards

References and sources

References
  1. ^ Orthograph with an accent in Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps.
  2. ^ Jennings, Peter (14 February 2003). "New keeper of the Queen's stamp collection", The Times. Retrieved on 23 December 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps, page 308.
  4. ^ Tasks describes by Michael Sefi in an interview to The Chronicle in October 2004 Archived 2 June 2012 at WebCite. Published January 2005. Web page updates 28 May 2005, retrieved 23 December 2007.
  5. ^ "The Missing Virgin returns Home in triumph" Archived 15 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Island Sun, 2002, retrieved 23 December 2007.
  6. ^ Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps, pages 309-310.
  7. ^ a b Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps, page 309.
  8. ^ a b c Margaret Vousden, "Obituary", Gibbons Stamp Monthly, July 2020, p.12.
Sources
  • Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps. The Authorised History of the Royal Philatelic Collection, éd. Methuen, 2004, ISBN 0-413-77228-4.