Capt. Victor Charles Hugh Gordon-Lennox (10 September 1897 – 25 January 1968) was a British Army soldier and journalist who was a diplomatic correspondent for The Daily Mail and The Daily Telegraph. In the lead-up to the Second World War, he was an editor of the influential conservative newsletter The Whitehall Letter.[1]
From 1923–9, Gordon-Lennox was The Daily Mail's political correspondent. From 1930–4, he was the diplomatic correspondent of The Daily Telegraph, for which he wrote a "London Day by Day" column under the pseudonym Peterborough. In the 1930s, he, Graham Hutton, and American Helen Kirkpatrick edited a weekly anonymous newsletter The Whitehall Letter, which The Times called "one of the best informed of 'behind the scenes' information sheets" in politics.[1] Critical of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement toward Nazi Germany, The Whitehall Letter offered an alternative to establishment media's unwavering support of Chamberlain.[7] It was regularly read by future Prime Ministers Winston Churchill and Anthony Eden; King Gustaf V of Sweden was also a subscriber.[8]
According to The Times's obituary, he possessed "a knack of getting hold of something that others had missed. Gordon-Lennox was a well-liked character not only in what used to be loosely called "club-land" but in many countries. His distinguished appearance, the width of his contacts, his immense personal charm, made him stand out among journalists of his period."[1]
Personal life
Gordon-Lennox married three times. From 1923–28, he was married to Ann Dorothy Bridge (née Browne). In 1928, she remarried to Sir George Edward Leon, 2nd Baronet.[9]
In 1958, he married Norah Schofield, daughter of newspaper editor Guy Schofield.[9]
An avid motorist, Gordon-Lennox owned one of the few Bentley 8 Litres produced.[1] In the 1930s, he purchased the 1927 Bentley 3 Litre belonging to his friend David Niven, which gave Niven the funds he needed to leave the army and become an actor.[11]