Fitzroy Maclean
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Sir Fitzroy Hew Royle MacLean of Dunconnel, 1st Baronet of Strachur and Glensluain, (March 11, 1911, Egypt – June 15, 1996, Scotland) was a Scottish diplomat, soldier, adventurer, writer and politician. In Eastern Approaches, MacLean recounted his extraordinary adventures in Soviet Central Asia, and in the Western Desert Campaign, where he specialized in commando raids behind enemy lines. It has been speculated that Ian Fleming used Maclean as one of his inspirations for James Bond.
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[edit] Early life
Maclean went to school at Eton College, followed by King's College, Cambridge University. On going down from Cambridge, he joined the Diplomatic Service in 1933. His clan's ancestral home was Duart Castle on the Isle of Mull in the Hebrides.
[edit] In the Soviet Union
In the mid-thirties Fitzroy MacLean was posted to the British embassy in Paris. Bored with the pleasant but undemanding routine, he requested a posting to Moscow, which would later become the basis for his best known book, the autobiographical Eastern Approaches. MacLean was in Moscow until late 1939, and so was present during the great Stalinist purges, observing the fates of Bukharin and other great Russian revolutionaries. While in Moscow, MacLean ventured by train and by foot into often remote regions of the Soviet Union, which were off limits to foreigners, and was pursued by the NKVD as he did so.
[edit] World War II: North Africa and Yugoslavia
When war broke out, Maclean was prevented from enlisting at first because of his position as a diplomat. He eventually managed to sign up in 1941 by running for the House of Commons, one of the few possible reasons for resigning the Diplomatic Corps. Only entering in order to quit the foreign service, he actually won election to Parliament as the Conservative MP from Lancaster and immediately joined the Cameron Highlanders as a private, but was quickly promoted to lieutenant.
In North Africa in 1942, he distinguished himself in the early actions of the newly formed SAS. Amongst his accomplishments was the famed kidnapping of the German Consul from Axis-controlled Iraq, an incident that soon led to Hitler's government to withdraw its support of the military junta in that country. Maclean was a brilliant practitioner in the T.E. Lawrence brand of fighting, and he reported directly to Churchill in Cairo. Along with Ralph A. Bagnold, he developed ways of driving vehicles over the Libyan sand 'seas'.
Winston Churchill personally chose him to lead a liaison mission to central Yugoslavia in 1943, where Tito and his partisans were emerging as a major irritant to the German control of the Balkans. His mission, as he wryly put it, was "simply to find out who was killing the most Germans and suggest means by which we could help them kill more." Maclean knew Tito well, and would later produce two biographies of him. Maclean's relationship with Tito's partisans was not always easy, partly because they were Communist, while he came from an upper-class Scottish background, and had witnessed Stalinism in action. However, his biography of Tito reveals the admiration he held for the Yugoslav leader and the Yugoslav communist led anti-fascist struggle. He developed a great affection for Yugoslavia and its people and was later given permission to buy a house on the island of Korcula.
After the war he received the Croix de Guerre (France), Order of Kutuzov (Russia) and Order of the Partisan Star (Yugoslavia).
[edit] Later life
Maclean had been elected as Conservative Member of Parliament for Lancaster in a 1941 by-election. He served briefly as a junior Minister at the War Office from 1954 to 1957. In the 1959 general election he switched constituencies to Bute and North Ayrshire where he was re-elected until he retired at the February 1974 general election. In his last two years, he was appointed as a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and Western European Union.
He married Veronica Nell Fraser-Phipps in 1946. She was the daughter of the 16th Lord Lovat and widow of naval hero Lt. Alan Phipps, who was killed ashore at Leros in 1943. Maclean had two sons by her: Charles Edward (b.1946) and Alexander James Simon Aeneas, called James for short (b.1949). He was also stepfather to her previous children, Susan Rose "Suki" Phipps (b.1941) and Jeremy Julian Phipps (b.1942).
Sir Fitzroy was honoured with the baronetcy of Maclean of Strachur and Glensluain in 1957, was made the 15th Hereditary Keeper and Captain of Dunconnel Castle in 1981 and was made a knight of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle in 1994.
Maclean was best known in later life for his books which ranged from fiction to Scottish history, to biographies of Tito and books about Russia. Take Nine Spies is a collection of true spy stories, including Mata Hari, Richard Sorge, Kim Philby, Gordon Lonsdale, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean.
[edit] Biographies
- Maclean, Lady Veronica: Past Forgetting: A Memoir of Heroes, Adventure, Love and Life With Fitzroy Maclean
- McLynn, Frank: Fitzroy MacLean
[edit] See also
[edit] Bibliography
- Eastern Approaches 1949
- Disputed Barricade: the life and times of Josip Broz-Tito, Marshal of Yugoslavia 1957
- A Person from England 1958
- Back to Bokhara 1959
- Yugoslavia 1969
- Concise History of Scotland 1970
- The Battle of Neretva 1970
- The Back of Beyond: an illustrated companion to Central Asia and Mongolia 1974
- To Causasus 1976
- Holy Russia 1978
- Take Nine Spies 1978
- Tito 1980
- Josip Broz Tito: A Pictorial Biography 1980 ISBN 0070446601
- The Isles of the Sea 1985
- Portrait of the Soviet Union 1988
- Bonnie Prince Charlie 1988
- All the Russias 1992
- Highlanders: A History of the Scottish Clans 1995
[edit] External links
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Herwald Ramsbotham |
Member of Parliament for Lancaster 1941–1959 |
Succeeded by Humphry Berkeley |
Preceded by Charles MacAndrew |
Member of Parliament for Bute and North Ayrshire 1959–Feb 1974 |
Succeeded by John Corrie |
Baronetage of the United Kingdom | ||
Preceded by New creation |
Baronet (of ?) 1957–1996 |
Succeeded by Sir Charles Edward Maclean |
Categories: 1911 births | 1996 deaths | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from English constituencies | Conservative MPs (UK) | British diplomats | British people of World War II | British Army officers | Knights of the Thistle | Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom | Scottish politicians | Scottish soldiers | Scottish writers | Alumni of King's College, Cambridge | Old Etonians | UK MPs 1935-1945 | UK MPs 1945-1950 | UK MPs 1950-1951 | UK MPs 1951-1955 | UK MPs 1955-1959 | UK MPs 1959-1964 | UK MPs 1964-1966 | UK MPs 1966-1970 | UK MPs 1970-1974