Clive Loehnis

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Sir Clive Loehnis (24 August 1902 - 23 May 1992[1]) was Director of Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), the UK signals intelligence agency, from 1960-1964.

Loehnis was born in 1902 in Chelsea, London. His father, Herman Loehnis, was born in New York, but had become a naturalised British citizen and became a barrister[1].

Clive Loehnis joined the Royal Navy, graduating from the Royal Naval College, Osbourne, the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth, and the Royal Naval College, Greenwich. He became qualified in signals in 1928 and left the Navy in 1935 as a lieutenant commander. In 1938 he returned to the Signals Division of the Admiralty, where he earned the silver oak leaves of a commander before retiring in 1942 and going into the Naval Intelligence Division. When he was demobilised after the war, he joined GCHQ, at that time a semi-covert division of the Foreign Office.[2]

Loehnis was appointed deputy to Sir Eric Jones when the latter succeeded Edward Travis as Director of GCHQ in 1952. When Jones retired in 1960, Loehis was promoted to the directorship, which he held until 1964. He was knighted in 1962.

Loehnis married Rosemary Ryder in 1929, and the the marriage produced a son and a daughter. After leaving GCHQ Loehnis retired to Belgravia, where he died in May 1992[1].

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c D. R. Nicoll, "Loehnis, Sir Clive (1902-1992), naval officer and civil servant", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  2. ^ James Bamford, The Puzzle Palace
Government offices
Preceded by
Sir Eric Jones
Director of GCHQ
1960-1964
Succeeded by
Sir Leonard Hooper