William James de L'Aigle Buchan, 3rd Baron
Tweedsmuir (10 January 1916 – 29 June 2008), also known as
"William Tweedsmuir", was an English peer and author of novels,
short stories, memoirs and verse. He was the second son of the
writer and
Governor General
of Canada,
John Buchan.
Early life and career
Brought up
at Elsfield Manor, outside Oxford
, he
frequently wrote poetry as a boy and appeared as "Bill" in his aunt
Anna Masterton Buchan's popular novels, written under the pen-name
"O. Douglas". His mother, Susan Charlotte Grosvenor,
was a close relative of the
Duke of
Westminster. Visitors to the family home included a 15-year-old
Jessica Mitford in the summer of
1932,
T. E. Lawrence, a
week before his death in 1935, and, that same year,
Virginia Woolf, who called him "a
simple".
Buchan
attended the Dragon
School
in Oxford, then Eton
, and won the
Harvey English verse prize there. At New College,
Oxford
, he "enjoyed a riotous year", according to an
obituary in The Daily
Telegraph, before dropping out. (A different
picture of his personality was given by an obituary in the
Liverpool Daily Post,
which described him during his schoolboy period as "a shy and
solitary figure, and this mood continued into New College, Oxford".
Visiting the set of
Alfred
Hitchcock's
film
version of
The Thirty-Nine
Steps, a novel written by his father, the young man became
interested in the movie industry, and Buchan senior got him a job
working with Hitchcock at
Gaumont-British
Motion Picture Corporation. His salary as third assistant
director was a token five shillings a week, so he lived off an
allowance from his parents and lodged in London with the writer
Elizabeth Bowen. It was becoming
clear to him that he was being edged out of his job at
Gaumont-British when a throat ailment resulted in an operation,
causing him to leave sooner. To recuperate, he went to Canada,
where his father was serving as
governor general.
On the order of the
Canadian prime minister,
Mackenzie King, the young Buchan was
barred, along with his brother Alastair, from a nightclub outside
Ottawa
. King disapproved of Buchan's parents, in
particular regarding his father as a "
libertine".
He then
moved to New
York
in 1937, where his father provided him with
literary connections. At one point he asked the critic
Alexander Woollcott for a job
but was told, "When I was a boy you were supposed to go to the
bottom of the nearest tree and climb steadily until you got to the
top."
At the suggestion of French film director and actor
Michel Saint-Denis, Buchan visited
Peggy Ashcroft, who had acted in
The 39 Steps, and the pair began a two-year affair.
Buchan
then returned to England at the age of 21, but soon spent three
months in Florence
, Italy
, and on his
return met Kenneth de Courcy,
publisher of Intelligence Digest and carried dispatches
from de Courcy to France. On one occasion Buchan visited
Otto von Habsburg, claimant to the
throne of Austria, who
questioned him closely about British politics.
In 1939 Buchan married Nesta Crozier, and the couple had a
daughter. He also co-founded The Pilot Press, which published his
short (at 10,000 words) but admiring book on
Winston Churchill (a stance at odds with
that of his father), and later his brief history of the
Royal Air Force. He learned of the death of
his father in 1940 from a news hoarding.
War service
He enlisted the
Royal Air Force in
February 1940 and joined
No.
32 Squadron, flying
Hawker Hurricane on
patrols in the
Western
Approaches.
He was transferred to Egypt
, then to
No. 261 Squadron in Iraq
.
He flew
over Palestine and served in the defence
of Cyprus
. He
initially served
in the ranks, and was a
leading aircraftman prior to
being commissioned as a
pilot officer
on probation on 20 January 1941 (with seniority from 14 January),
the commission was confirmed, and he was promoted to war
substantive
flying officer, precisely
a year later.
After the Japanese invasion of
Singapore
, 261 Squadron was sent to reinforce the air force
on Java
.
By the
time it arrived at Ceylon
(now Sri
Lanka), on the carrier Indomitable, the pilots were
ordered to fly to RAF Station China Bay
on that island. On Easter Sunday, 5 April 1942, the squadron saw
intense action against Japanese bombers from five aircraft carriers
mounting a major attack against Colombo
. When the Japanese force withdrew four days
later, the carrier
Hermes
and two cruisers had been sunk, and only six of 261 Squadron's
original 18 aircraft were serviceable. He was promoted to
flight lieutenant on 20 January
1943.
Buchan twice had to
bale out of his
aircraft and came close to death on other occasions. At one point a
cannon shell struck behind his cockpit seat; on another, a shell
hit his ammunition reserve but didn't go off.
After serving with
air defence for Ceylon and Madras
, he was
transferred to air headquarters in Calcutta
for six months, then returned to join No. 17 Squadron in Ceylon. He was back in
England in April 1945 to serve at
RAF Training Command, where he compiled
a history,
The Royal Air Force at War, an account of the
daily lives of servicemen, and was promoted to
squadron leader before ending his service.
This was published by his Pilot Press, as mentioned above.
Later life and career
His marriage broke up during the war, and in 1946 he divorced his
first wife and married Barbara Ensor, with whom he had three sons
and three daughters, including the writer
James Buchan and Ursula Buchan, gardening
columnist for
The Daily
Telegraph. That marriage ended in divorce in 1960.
After the
war, Buchan worked in Glasgow
for the explosives division of Nobel Industries, then became London editor
of Reader's Digest.
He spent three years with the magazine and claimed that he came up
with the story "How My Dog Taught Me to Pray". Buchan founded a
public relations company, which
went out of business by the late 1960s, then did work for
Norwest Holst, a large construction company,
and later for
Elf Aquitaine, the
French national oil company.
Simultaneously, Buchan pursued his literary career. A short story
collection,
The Exclusives, was published in 1943. He next
published
Personal Poems in 1952 and
Kumari in
1955, a novel set in Calcutta. Two thrillers,
Helen All
Alone (1961) and
The Blue Pavilion (1969), followed.
He also edited the correspondence of
John
Masefield and the violinist
Audrey Napier-Smith,
Letters to
Reyna, which appeared in 1982. He was best known for his
John Buchan: a Memoir, also published in 1982, and his
autobiography,
Rags of Time, which appeared in 1990.
On the
death of his brother, Johnnie, in 1996, William Buchan succeeded to
the title, taking his seat in the House of Lords
. There he spoke once, on the case for an
elected
mayor of London.
In 1960, the year his second marriage was dissolved, Buchan married
a third time, to Sauré Tatchell, with whom he had a son. According
to Buchan's obituary in
The Daily Telegraph, in addition
to the eight children of his three marriages "there was also
another daughter." Buchan's eldest son, Toby (born in 1950),
succeeded to the peerage.
Reception of his writings
The memoir of his father (1982) was regarded as his best book, but
his autobiography,
The Rage of Time (1990), had its
admirers, according to an obituary in the
Liverpool Daily
Post.
His book of poems, published in 1952, was praised in the
Times Literary
Supplement, which described his voice as "winning and
sincere". The reviewer wrote, "In writing to please himself, he
will please others too, for his unselfconcious sympathies are easy
to share, his young man’s experience corresponds with that of half
his generation, his turn for verbal music is quietly refreshing,
and everywhere competent."
Kumari, published in 1955, has been described as "a lush,
complex novel about the experiences and romances of a young man in
1930s India". One reviewer wrote that the book tells the reader as
much about India and British rule there "as a hundred official
publications, or, it might be added, a dozen travel books".
Buchan wrote his first thriller,
Helen All Alone,
deliberately in the vein of his father’s novels, but with a woman
as the main character, a point which provoked criticism in
The Times. The reviewer declared,
"Women in a thriller should be decorative, not pivotal." The
TLS, in contrast, praised the book's description of
atmosphere and scenery.
Works
Each year links to corresponding "[year] in literature" or "[year]
in poetry" article:
- 1940: Winston
Churchill, a short, admiring biography of Winston Churchill
- 1943: The
Exclusives, a short-story collection
- 1946: The Royal Air Force
at War, an account of the daily lives of servicemen
- 1952: Personal Poems,
evoking life in Wartime India
- 1955: Kumari, a
novel set in Calcutta
- 1961: Helen All
Alone, thriller set in 1950 in the Balkans, thought to be the
first involving a woman British spy as the main character
- 1966: The Blue
Pavilion, thriller based on the early-1950s French sex scandal
known as the Ballets Roses. A young
businessman visiting Paris with his beautiful girlfriend becomes
caught up in depravity and blackmail.
- 1982: Editor, Letters to
Reyna, correspondence of poet John
Masefield and Audrey
Napier-Smith, a violinist with the Hallé Orchestra
- 1982: John Buchan: a
Memoir, about his relationship with his father
- 1990: The Rags Of
Time, autobiography
Buchan also wrote introductions for literary works — including
Don Quixote and the
1994 Oxford
Classics edition of his father's thriler
Mr
Standfast.
Notes
External links