March 25, 2004

Steve Thoburn

sthoburn.jpgSteve Thoburn, a greengrocer in Sunderland, England, earned the nickname the "Metric Martyr" in 2001 when he refused to sell his wares using the metric system.

For selling bananas by the pound, Thoburn's scales were seized by Trading Standards officers and used in his prosecution. European Union rules adopted by the British Parliament allow fruit and vegetables to be labeled in both metric and imperial measures, but all produce must be sold in grams and kilograms only.

Thoburn was found guilty of breaching the Weights and Measures Act and given a conditional six-month discharge. He and four other British vendors appealed the conviction to the House of Lords, but ultimately lost their two-year legal battle.

Thoburn left school when he was 16 and joined the family fruit and vegetable business. He opened his own shop in Southwick market in 1989, where he worked six days a week.

Britain's most famous fruit vendor died on March 14 from heart failure. He was 39.

Posted on March 25, 2004 5:15 AM

Tributes

I have just heard of Steve's death, as I am now living in Beijing, China. What a sad loss for all of us who have, at one time or another, taken up the cudgels against the faceless bureaucrats of Brussels. I reported Steve's battle for the Morning Star newspaper and also took a great personal interest in it.

Posted by Ian Morrison on September 24, 2004 2:27 AM

Revisited the Autumn 2001"this England" magazine
article "Weighing in with a Silver Cross for the
battling Metric Martyr".

Shame on the then Sunderland City Council in
County Durham.

All the best to STEVE"s Family!

And thank you Steve Thoburn.

Posted by Brian Zelley on April 15, 2005 4:35 AM
Post a tribute









Remember personal info?


NOTE: Tributes with fake e-mail addresses may be removed. At the discretion of the site's editor, people leaving inappropriate comments will be banned from posting in this forum.