Hon. Hamish St.Clair-Erskine

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Hon. Hamish St.Clair-Erskine's Geni Profile

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James Alexander Wedderburn St Clair-Erskine

Birthdate:
Death: December 17, 1973 (64)
Immediate Family:

Son of James Francis Harry St. Clair-Erskine, 5th Earl of Rosslyn and Vera Mary St. Clair-Erskine
Fiancé of The Hon. Nancy Mitford
Brother of Lady Mary Sybil Dunn and David St Clair-Erskine
Half brother of Lady Rosabelle Millicent Brand and Francis Edward Scudamore St Clair-Erskine, Lord Loughborough

Managed by: Douglas John Nimmo
Last Updated:

About Hon. Hamish St.Clair-Erskine

http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00059071&tree=LEO

BIOGRAPHY He was educated at Eton and New College Oxford. As a Major Coldstream Guards he served 1939-1942, was wounded, and mentioned twice in despatches. In North Africa he had displayed his bravery and after blowing up a German tank at Tobruk, he was captured and imprisoned in Italy. He escaped from his camp just before the Germans arrived to take it over; dressed as a woman he made his way up through Italy, moving from one ducal house to another until he was eventually picked up by the British and repatriated. He immediately returned to Italy to organise an escape route for other prisoners on the run.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Alexander_Wedderburn_St._Clair-...

James Alexander Wedderburn "Hamish" St. Clair-Erskine (23 August 1909 – 17 December 1973) was an English aristocrat aesthete, unrequited love of Nancy Mitford.

Early life

James Alexander Wedderburn nicknamed "Hamish" was the son of James St Clair-Erskine, 5th Earl of Rosslyn (1869–1939). His siblings were Mary St Clair-Erskine Dunn Campbell McCabe Dunn (1912–1993), Rosabelle St Clair-Erskine (1891–1956) and Francis St Clair-Erskine, Lord Loughborough (1892–1929).

At Eton College, St Clair-Erskine was the lover of Tom Mitford. He attended Oxford University, where he was friends with English poet Sir John Betjeman. In the Letters edited by Betjeman's daughter, Candida Lycett Green, and published in 1996, she remembers how her father and St. Clair-Erskine "went out in fast cars, driving all night in the flat country near Coolham". According to James Lees-Milne's diaries: "At Oxford he had the most enchanting looks – mischievous, twinkling eyes, slanting eyebrows. He was slight of build, well dressed, gay as gay, always snobbish however, and terribly conscious of his nobility [...] the toast of the university." At Oxford he was friends with Evelyn Waugh.

Career

He fought in the World War II, became a Major in the Coldstream Guards, escaping from a prison camp and walking through Italy to join the Allied troops. He was awarded a Military Cross in 1943.

In 1969, together with Anthony Rhodes, he translated Tapestries by Mercedes Viale Ferrero.

He was the dame de compagnie to Daisy Fellowes and Enid Kenmare.

Personal life

Hamish St. Clair-Erskine was homosexual, but nevertheless, Nancy Mitford fell in love with him, and it was due to this unrequited love that she attempted suicide and wrote her first novel, Highland Fling: the male lead is based upon St. Clair-Erskine.

In the 1920s he was friends with Aileen Sibell Mary Guinness and Hon Brinsley Sheridan Bushe Plunket and was guest to their residence, the Luttrellstown Castle, County Dublin.

He was good friends with Patrick Leigh Fermor and his wife Joan: in the 1940s the three of them drove down through France and Italy, and later, Joan accompanied Peter Quennell and St. Clair-Erskine to Sicily, where she was to take the photographs of an article Quennell was writing.

At St. Clair-Erskine's death in 1973, Alan Payan Pryce-Jones described him as a "bright apparition who once upon a time swept past them like a kingfisher: all colour and sparkle and courage [...] [he found] small place in a world which turned away from an unambitious charmer whose only enduring gift was his charm".

Legacy

Painter Adrian Maurice Daintrey took his portrait sold by Christie's on 25 August 2005.

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Hon. Hamish St.Clair-Erskine's Timeline

1909
August 23, 1909
1973
December 17, 1973
Age 64