The Development Of Peterborough Law Firm Hegarty LLP From 1974 To Date

In February 1968 the Peterborough Development Corporation was established with a task to provide homes, work and a full range of urban facilities and services for an extra 70,000 people drawn mainly at that time from the Greater London Area. Richard Hegarty was born in nearby Stamford and went to Stamford School and even as a sixth-former saw the potential for legal work in the greater Peterborough area. Whilst at Leicester University studying law he saw the beginnings of the new Peterborough being built with new roads and houses and industrial developments beginning to make an impact on the Peterborough skyline.

Richard Hegarty graduated from Leicester University in 1972 and commenced his articles with a firm of solicitors in Leicester, Harding & Barnett, and then subsequently Gardner & Millhouse. He firmed up an intention to set up in practice in Peterborough in the early part of 1973. Richard's father was the managing clerk of a firm of solicitors in Stamford, Kelham & Sons, and had vast experience in conveyancing and probate matters over a 40 year period. He was due to retire at the end of 1974 and Richard and his father agreed to set up in practice in Peterborough. Mr Hegarty senior brought not only a vast experience but also many very useful contacts in the Peterborough area. The firm opened its doors on 15th October 1974 in premises at 16 Lincoln Road, Peterborough. Richard's mother was the receptionist and typist. The offices consisted of two rooms and a cubby-hole which was a makeshift reception. Peterborough had not seen a new firm of solicitors for some time, but the timing could not have been better with a substantial increase in the number of new homes being built in Peterborough and an influx of new residents. In the early days Richard would do criminal, family and conveyancing work, but it soon became apparent that the firm would have to expand to cope with the substantial volume of work that was coming to the firm. Mr Hegarty senior retired from Kelham & Sons in December 1974 and initially was going to work part-time in Peterborough. The work load was such that it was immediately obvious that he would need to work on a full-time basis and this he did until he died in harness in August 1983.

The firm continued to thrive on the back of the expansion of Peterborough, and in October 1977 Tim Thompson joined and became a partner shortly after qualifying in 1979.

Hegarty & Co opened a branch office in Stamford in December 1979 in Maiden Lane. These premises soon proved to be too small for the volume of work that came into the Stamford office and in 1984 the firm purchased premises at 10 Ironmonger Street and redeveloped them into modern offices. The Stamford office continues to practice to this day from those premises.

The expansion of the Peterborough office continued at a pace and in 1984 the whole of 16 Lincoln Road was purchased and redeveloped into offices. Martin Bloom joined the firm as in 1980 and the practice continued to expand the areas of law which it was involved in.

In the mid-1980's it was decided that each solicitor would no longer handle a broad range of legal matters but should specialize, and so separate departments for property, crime, litigation and family were created. Although such specialization in firms of solicitors is now taken for granted, at this time it was very much a new phenomena for provincial firms.

Towards the end of the 1980's it became apparent that the firm would have to move into new offices to be able to cope with the increase in the numbers of staff and the onset of new technology. A site in Broadway was earmarked for development and the partners purchased the site and built offices which they still own today.

Richard Hegarty was elected to the Council of the Law Society in 1989 to represent solicitors in Cambridgeshire and Bedfordshire. He spent a total of 16 years on the Law Society Council during which time he held a number of senior posts. In the early 1990's he lectured extensively in practice development and was instrumental in a number of projects at the Law Society which were designed to improve the quality of legal services provided by solicitors. The most notable of these were the creation of the "practice management standards" which Richard helped to write in the early 1990's. Richard saw the importance of improving the quality of legal services that solicitors provided and how important the use of systems was going to be in the 1990's and beyond. Practice management standards developed into the accreditation mark Lexel which is now the accepted standard for quality firms in England and Wales. Hegarty & Co were one of the first firms to obtain accreditation to BS5750 which is now the ISO 9001 standard. This accreditation they retain today together with the Law Society Lexel standard.

Although he retired from the Law Society Council in 2005 Richard still serves on the Compliance Committee of the Solicitors Regulation Authority and is a member of the Law Society's Lexel assessment panel.

As the firm developed, the partnership increased and Matthew Sidebottom was made a partner in 1990 four years after joining the firm.

In 2003 Kally Singh, who had completed his training with the firm, became a partner and Hugh Nicholls, who had been at a major City of London practice for 17 years joined as a partner.

On 1st May 2006 the firm became a limited liability partnership with the name of Hegarty LLP. The same year saw the appointment of three new partners Andrew Heeler, Greg Baker and Sean Rowcliffe increasing the number of partners to it's current total of nine.

Richard Hegarty says, "Today Hegarty LLP is recognised a major regional firm employing almost 70 staff, and provides a broad range of legal expertise.It is pleasing to have helped with that vision of Peterborough back in 1968 and help in a small way acheive is goals"

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About Richard Hegarty

Richard Hegarty founded the firm of Hegarty LLP in Peterborough 1974. He is the Senior and Administrative Partner and deals with company commercial matters. Visit his site to view this article at http://www.hegarty.co.uk/HistoryofHegartyLLPSolicitors.


And here is another random article you might be interested in...

Business & Career: Know Your Ruling Star!

"Know your Ruling Star. One man is better received by one nation than another, or is one welcome by one city than another. He finds more luck in one office or position than in another, and all though his qualifications are equal or even identical. Let each man know his luck as well as his talents. Follow your guiding star and help it without mistaking any other for it. Know how to transplant yourself. There are nations with whom one must cross their borders to make one's value felt."
â€" Balthasar Gracian, (Spain, 1600's)

Have you ever felt, "Here I am, best job I ever had, good money, an excellent career move â€" but, what in the world am I doing here where I feel so alone and out-of-place with my surroundings? How did this happen to me?"

I've been there, because someone offered me a job and I accepted, knowing ahead-of-time, intuitively I wouldn't feel at home in the town and surroundings.

Or â€" maybe you love your location but, sadly, are unable to find any openings in your field. I've been there also. Looking back on my years in Austin, Texas, I can't believe the number of short-term, soul-emptying jobs I tried very hard and unsuccessfully do to. My job-duration ranged from only two hours (which was long enough when you hate what you are doing!) to several months (each day seeming like an eternity) before my opportunities in broadcasting finally came.

It's a rare person these days who is able to say, "I love this community, love my home, love the work I do, get along great with my business colleagues and supervisors. How do you beat perfection?"

There is a wonderful quote I repeated to myself many, many times during my ups and downs in Texas.

"Hence the first principle in changing one's character is to seek another environment, to let new forces play upon our unused chords, and draw from us a better music." â€" Will Durant

That's what I wanted! I wanted another location â€" another place â€" where new forces could play upon my unused chords and draw from me a better music.

"There are nations with whom one must cross their borders to make one's value felt." â€" Gracian

Yes! Yes! Yes! That's what I wanted. To cross borders and feel my native talents valued again.

"Know your Ruling Star," the Spanish priest Gracian wrote in The Art of Worldly Wisdom. "One man is better received by one nation than another, or is one welcome by one city than another. He finds more luck in one office or position than in another, and all though his qualifications are equal or even identical."

We are better received in certain locations or areas than in others, welcomed when we show up, and we most certainly do find more luck in one place than another.

"But where, where, where is THAT PLACE?" I wondered.

In Texas, for every 100% plus I gave in my career, the returns (feeling valued, appreciated, and being monetarily rewarded), always fell short.

I hosted a noon talk show for awhile at an Austin TV station. Our ratings were great. The guests I booked were top names in the literary, entertainment, self-improvement, and political arenas.

After our ratings came in one spring, I couldn't believe how well the show was doing.

Several days later, however, the General Manager wanted to see me.

After all the years of my show's success, he said, "James, I can't complain about your ratings. That's good for ad revenue, but I finally got a chance to see your show yesterday. As you know I only have a tenth grade education, never finished high school, started in sales, worked my way up to where I am today." He beamed proudly, "I didn't understand it."

I knew when he said, "I didn't understand it," my show was doomed.

The GM was the standard by which all business decisions at our stations were made.

I wanted to call him, "Idiot," but restrained myself.

My favorite line in Texas TV came from a female news director who told me, "You have a master's degree. We don't need people that smart to do the news." I never worked at that station.

"Let each man know his luck as well as his talents. Follow your guiding star and help it without mistaking any other for it. Know how to transplant yourself," Gracian reminds us.

Know how to transplant yourself!

Finally, I did transplant myself, once again. It was time to move from the newsroom and go into teaching; use, finally, that masters degree referred to earlier that wasn't needed to report the news.

"There is a simple answer to the question 'What is the purpose of our individual lives?" A.J. Ayer wrote. "They have whatever purpose we succeed in putting into them."

Yet, if you believe you are being guided by and toward a higher destiny, as I do, use what others know (their gifts and resources) to inform and enlighten yourself.

I've also successfully used relocation astrology as an essential tool to follow my guiding star. Through my sessions with Cait Benten, I'm finding, as we'd all like to do, a balance of the "right place" and the "right work" combined.

"This time, like all other times, is a very good one, if we but know what to do with it." --Ralph Waldo Emerson

http://www.astro-earth-relocation.com/james%20by%20phone.htm

http://www.astro-earth-relocation.com

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About James Clayton Napier

Now, after a career as an award-winning media communicator and as a university professor, James has shared meaning-filled conversations with film stars, recording artists, US Presidents and first ladies, state governors, world-famous authors, scientists, and people from most every walk of life.