Edward Tomkins

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Sir Edward Emile Tomkins, GCMG, CVO (16 November 1915 - 20 September 2007) was a British diplomat. He was British Ambassador to the Netherlands from 1970 to 1972, and British Ambassador to France from 1972 to 1975. He owned Winslow Hall in Buckinghamshire, often attributed to Christopher Wren, from 1959.

Tomkins was the son of Lieutenant Colonel E.L. Tomkins and his French wife,[1] and was raised partly in France and thus grew up speaking perfect French. He was educated at Ampleforth College and Trinity College, Cambridge. He joined the Diplomatic Service in 1939. After joining the Army in 1940 during World War II, he served as a liaison officer with the Free French Forces in the Middle East. He was captured by German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in 1941 while making his way back to British lines from the battle of Bir Hakeim with French General Marie Pierre Kœnig.

He was imprisoned in Camp 41, a prisoner-of-war camp near Parma in northern Italy, alongside Pat Gibson and Nigel Strutt. Strutt was repatriated on medical grounds, and Gibson and Tomkins were moved to another camp. He and Gibson escaped from the new camp, and spent 81 days walking 500 miles south to Bari, crossing the Apennines and German lines, to return to Allied-held territory. He was awarded the French Croix de Guerre for his services.

He returned to the Diplomatic Service in 1944, and was posted to Moscow until 1946. He returned to Whitehall in 1948, to become Assistant Private Secretary to the Foreign Secretary, serving under Ernest Bevin and then Herbert Morrison. He was First Secretary in Washington, D.C. in 1951, then in Paris from 1955, in charge of press relations. In Paris, he met Gillian Benson, daughter of Air Commodore C.E. Benson. They married in 1955.

He was appointed CVO in 1957, and CMG in 1960. After another period in London, he was Minister in Bonn, where he befriended Claus von Amsberg (later husband of Princess and then Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands). He returned to Washington as Minister in 1967.

Advanced to KCMG in 1969, he was Head of Mission and Ambassador in The Hague from 1970 to 1972, and then replaced Christopher Soames as Ambassador to France in 1973. Agence France Presse lauded his appointment an historic breakthrough in Franco-British relations - the first fluent speaker of French and Roman Catholic to hold the position, together with a record of service with the Free French Forces in North Africa. He also spoke excellent German and Italian.

Supported by British Prime Minister Edward Heath, Tomkins took a leading role in the negotiations for Britain to join the European Economic Community in 1973. He established friendly personal and working relationships with two French presidents, Georges Pompidou and Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. He retired on leaving Paris in 1975, advanced to GCMG. He became a Grand Officier of the Légion d'honneur in 1984.

Tomkins lived at the Christopher Wren-designed Winslow Hall in Buckinghamshire. He bought the derelict and about-to-be-demolished house in 1959, and he and his wife carefully restored it. They lived there from 1975 after he retired from service. Sir Edward offered the house for sale in May 2007, four months before his death, for £3,000,000, comprising six bedroom suites, two self-contained flats and surrounded by 22 acres of land.

He was elected as a Conservative member of Buckinghamshire County Council from 1977 to 1985, and became a governor of Stowe School.

Tomkins married in 1955 Gillian Benson (d. 2003), a daughter of Air-Commodore Constantine Evelyn Benson by his wife Lady Morvyth Lilian Benson, a daughter of William Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley. They had three children, a son and two daughters. Lady Benson died in 2003.

Sir Edward Tomkins died at age 91 in 2007, and was survived by his three children.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Alan Campbell. Obituary: Sir Edward Tompkins. The Guardian. Thursday 27 September 2007. Retrieved 3 February 2008.