Roger Mortimer (racing) explained

Major Roger Francis Mortimer (22 November 1909  - November 1991),[1] was an English horse-racing correspondent, Coldstream Guards officer, prisoner of war, and author.Son of Haliburton Stanley Mortimer (1879-1957), of 11 Cadogan Gardens, Chelsea (a London stockbroker), and Dorothy Blackwell, of Crosse & Blackwell,[2] he was educated at Ludgrove, Eton and Sandhurst, and joined the Coldstream Guards in 1930. He was a Captain at Dunkirk (BEF, 1940) but was captured unconscious, all his men having been killed. Sir Frederick Vernon Corfield, QC, PC, and Freddy Burnaby-Atkins were among his friends made as a prisoner of war (no. 481, in the various Oflags and Stalags). He left the army in 1947 having post-war served in Trieste, and took an appointment at Raceform.[3]

For 29 years, from 1947-1975, he was the Sunday Times' racing correspondent (aka Fairway). He was succeeded by Brough Scott. He was also The Tote's PR and a racing reporter for BBC radio 2.

In 1947 Mortimer married Cynthia Sydney Denison-Pender, a niece of the 1st Lord Pender and granddaughter of Sir John Denison Denison-Pender, GBE, KCMG. Cynthia's sister Pamela had married General Sir Kenneth Thomas Darling, GBE, KCB, DSO, in 1941.

He was father of three: Jane Clare, Charles Roger Henry and Louise Star. His letters to them were published in 2012, 2013 and 2014. He lived at Budds Farm at Burghclere in Hampshire.

Books

External

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A tragically comic account of a Prodigal Son.
  2. Dear Lumpy, by Roger Mortimer and Louise Mortimer, Constable & Robinson, 2013
  3. John Karter: 'Mortimer: never at a loss for words', in The Sunday Times, 1 December 1991
  4. Web site: Home . constablerobinson.com.