Maurice George Carr Glyn

Maurice George Carr Glyn (12 March 1872-20 August 1920) was a banker and businessman who was briefly a member of the London County Council.

The son of the Hon. Pascoe Charles Glyn and Caolina Henrietta Hale, he was particularly interested in trade between Great Britain and South America. He became a director of the London and Brazilian Bank, Liebig's Extract of Meat Company, and a number of South American cattle producing companies. His other business interests included sitting on the boards of Dalgety and Company, Australasian merchants and of the London and Globe Insurance Company. He subsequently beacame a managing partner in the firm of Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co, bankers, of Lombard Street in the City of London.

In July 1912 he was appointed to fill a vacancy as an alderman on the London County Council.ref name=1912bya>The Feeding Of Dock Strikers' Children. County Council Debate, The Times, 24 July 1912, p.12 He resigned from the council on 20 January 1914.

During the First World War he served as an officer in the Dorset Yeomanry.

He lived at Albury Hall, near Bishops Stortford in Hertfordshire, and was High Sheriff of that county for the year 1912. He died of heart failure in 1920, aged 48.