Feed on
Posts
Comments

Patrick Gordon Walker

DESCRIPTION:
Patrick Gordon Walker was born in 1907 with a conservative background: his father was a Judge in India. He went to prep school, public school and Christ Church, Oxford as an undergraduate and then as a don. In Oxford he cut his political teeth, suffering some of the pitfalls that dogged his later time in office. He spent a year in Germany in the thirties, becoming fluent in the language and saw the beginnings of totalitarian rule.

In the war he joined the BBC German service broadcasting to Germany. In 1945 he went with a radio car and recorded the first radio broadcasts from Belsen, published as The Lid Lifts.
An extract from this book, long out of print, appears as an addendum.

He became an MP in 1945, and was Commonwealth Relations Secretary from 1950-51, followed by thirteen years in opposition. He lost his seat at Smethwick in the 1964 general election, but still became Foreign Secretary until he was defeated in a by-election at Leyton in January1965 and had to retire from his perfect job. Although he returned to parliament in 1966, becoming Minister without Portfolio and then Secretary of State for Education, he never reached the same heights and went to the Lords and then the European parliament.
He died in 1970, aged seventy-three.

AUTHOR:
‘My father never wrote an autobiography, and we were never quite sure why this was. It seems right that his life should be recorded in a political and family biography by one of his children and the task has fallen to me. The book traces my father’s life story, his political career and his role as a family man, devoted to his wife Audrey and to his five children. It has political and family photographs and is hopefully a fitting tribute to him.’
ALAN GORDON WALKER

Comments are closed.