Robert Boothby
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Robert John Graham Boothby, 1st Baron Boothby, KBE (also known as Bob Boothby) (12 February 1900 – 16 July 1986) was a Conservative politician.
The only son of Sir Robert Tuite Boothby, KBE, of Edinburgh and a cousin of the broadcaster Sir Ludovic Kennedy, Boothby was educated at Eton College and at Magdalen College, Oxford. He became a partner in a firm of stockbrokers.
He was an unsuccessful parliamentary candidate for Orkney and Shetland in 1923 and was elected as Member of Parliament for East Aberdeenshire in 1924, holding the seat until 1958. He was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Winston Churchill as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1926 to 1929 and held junior ministerial office as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food in 1940–41. During World War II, he joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, retiring with the rank of Flight Lieutenant.
Boothby advocated the UK's entry into the European Community (now the European Union) and was a British delegate to the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe from 1949 until 1957. He was a prominent commentator on public affairs on radio and television. He also advocated the virtues of herring as a food.
He was Vice-Chairman of the Committee on Economic Affairs, 1952–56; Honorary President of the Scottish Chamber of Agriculture, 1934, Rector of St Andrews University , 1958–61; Chairman of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, 1961–63, and President, Anglo-Israel Association, 1962–75. He was awarded an Honorary LLD by St Andrews, 1959 and was made an Honorary Burgess of the Burghs of Peterhead, Fraserburgh, Turriff and Rosehearty. He was appointed an Officer of the Legion of Honour in 1950, a KBE in 1953.
Boothby was raised to the peerage with the title Baron Boothby, of Buchan and Rattray Head in the County of Aberdeen on 22 August 1958; with his death the barony became extinct.
There is a blue plaque on his house in Eaton Square, London.
[edit] Private life
Boothby had a colourful, if reasonably discreet private life. He was twice married; in 1935 to Diana Cavendish (marriage dissolved in 1937) and in 1967 to Wanda Sanna. He also had a long affair with Dorothy Macmillan, wife of his fellow Conservative politician Harold Macmillan and they had a daughter Sarah, who was raised by the Macmillans as their own daughter. The writer and broadcaster Sir Ludovic Kennedy has said "... to my certain knowledge he [Boothby] fathered at least three children by the wives of other men (two by one woman, one by another)." Boothby was bisexual and had many homosexual relationships from his Eton days.
[edit] Publications
The New Economy, 1943; I Fight to Live, 1947; My Yesterday, Your Tomorrow, 1962; Boothby: recollections of a rebel, 1978.
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by: Frederick Martin |
Member for Aberdeen and Kincardine East 1924–1950 |
Succeeded by: constituency dissolved |
Preceded by: constituency dissolved |
Member for Aberdeenshire East 1950–1958 |
Succeeded by: Patrick Wolrige-Gordon |
Peerage of the United Kingdom | ||
Preceded by: New Creation |
Baron Boothby 1958–1986 |
Succeeded by: Extinct |
Categories: Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from Scottish constituencies | Conservative MPs (UK) | Barons in the Peerage of the United Kingdom | Anglo-Scots | Bisexual politicians | Old Etonians | Former students of Magdalen College, Oxford | Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire | LGBT politicians from the United Kingdom | LGBT people from Scotland | What's My Line panelists | People commemorated by blue plaques | 1900 births | 1986 deaths | UK MPs 1924-1929 | UK MPs 1929-1931 | UK MPs 1931-1935 | UK MPs 1935-1945 | UK MPs 1945-1950 | UK MPs 1950-1951 | UK MPs 1951-1955 | UK MPs 1955-1959