Eric Whelpton | |
Birth Name: | Eric George Whelpton |
Birth Date: | 21 March 1894 |
Birth Place: | Le Havre, France |
Death Place: | Hastings, England |
Occupation: | Reporter, author poet, teacher |
Nationality: | English |
Genre: | Travel |
Spouse: | Catherine Elsie Marian Barnes (1924) Barbara Crocker (born 1910)[1] |
Eric George Whelpton (21 March 1894 – 13 February 1981) was a British writer, teacher and traveller.
Whelpton was born on 21 March 1894 in Le Havre, France, the son of the Revd George Whelpton, minister of Trinity Methodist Church, Abingdon-on-Thames, Berkshire and Georgina Elizabeth Holmes (died 1897). His maternal grandfather was Sir Henry Light Governor of British Guiana from 1838-1848.[2]
He attended a small Paris school and lived in Passy[2] before the family moved to England in 1906. He attended Abingdon School from 1906 until 1909.[3] [4] From Abingdon he went to the Leys School, Cambridge before entering Hertford College, Oxford in 1913. His education was interrupted when he served during World War I.[2]
Whelpton taught English at Ecole Des Roches and ran an office for the interchange of pupils and teachers, together with Dorothy L. Sayers. In 1920 he then moved and bought an estate agency in Florence and later worked in a girls' school and started a weekly newspaper called the Italian Mail.[2] He taught at Christ Church Cathedral School. At the University of Oxford, Whelpton became a close friend of Sayers, and was one of the models for the character of Lord Peter Wimsey in her detective novels.[5] Whelpton later taught French at King's College School, London, and was reader in comparative education at King's College London (1931–42). Following the death of her husband, Dorothy Sayers acted as Whelpton's literary secretary. During World War II, Whelpton worked as a BBC news correspondent in France and, as recounted in his travel book, The Balearics:Majorca, Minorca, Ibiza, he was told by a Swiss correspondent that he was on the Gestapo blacklist.[6]
His last two books, The Making of a European (1974) and The Making of an Englishman (1977), are largely autobiographical.
From 1943 he was married to the artist and travel writer Barbara Crocker who illustrated a number of his books.[7]