- Patrick Hore-Ruthven
Major The Honourable Alexander Hardinge Patrick Hore-Ruthven (
30 August 1913 -24 December 1942 ) was a British soldier and poet.Hore-Ruthven was born in
Quetta inIndia . He was the only surviving child of Alexander Hore-Ruthven and his wife, Zara Eileen Pollok.He studied at
Cambridge University from 1931. While rusticated from Cambridge in 1932 due to a youthful indiscretion - he had bitten a policeman's nose - he met the society beauty Pamela Fletcher during astag hunt onExmoor . Their mutual lack of money delayed their marriage. In the meantime, he joined the Rifle Brigade in 1933 after he graduated. He served in Malta for three years. His father was createdBaron Gowrie in 1935.Hore-Ruthven and Pamela Fletcher were finally married at
Westminster Abbey on4 January 1939 , with her father, the Reverend Arthur Henry Fletcher, officiating. Their first son, Grey, was born on26 November 1939 .On the outbreak of the
Second World War , Hore-Ruthven was posted toCairo . Leaving their infant son with her parents inDublin , his wife followed him to Cairo, where she became friends withFreya Stark andJacqueline Lampson . She worked in Intelligence with the anti-Nazi ArabBrotherhood of Freedom , and he joined the newly-formed SAS. His wife returned toIreland in 1942, where she gave birth to their second son, Malise, on14 May 1942 . Promoted to Temporary Major, Hore-Ruthven died in Misurata Italian Hospital inLibya , having been severely wounded in a raid on a fuel dump nearTripoli . He was buried in the war cemetery in Tripoli. He was survived by his wife and two young sons, never having seen either.After his death, his father was created 1st
Earl of Gowrie in 1945, and his widow was styled Viscountess Ruthven of Canberra. She remarried, to MajorDerek Cooper , in 1949. On Hore-Ruthven's father's death in May 1955, his elder son, Grey, succeeded as 2nd Earl of Gowrie.Hore-Ruthven wrote several
war poem s which were published in Australian and English newspapers. A collection of his poems was published in Australia in 1943 under the title "The happy warrior" and republished in London in 1944 under the title "Desert Warrior: Poems". His collected letters were published in London in 1950 under the title "Joy of youth". A memorial fountain was constructed at Government House inCanberra .References
* [http://www.thepeerage.com/p8015.htm#i80149 The Peerage]
* [http://www.nla.gov.au/ms/findaids/2852.html#c0111 Papers of Lord Gowrie] at the National Library of Australia, relating to the death of Patrick Hore-Ruthven in 1942.External links
* [http://www.images.act.gov.au/duslibrary/imagesact.nsf/V01/3FD82F7B98081950CA256ABC001FB408?OpenDocument Picture] of the memorial fountain from the ACT Heritage Library
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.