Timothy Bligh
Sir Timothy James Bligh, KBE, DSO, DSC* (2 September 1918 – 12 March 1969) was a British naval officer, civil servant and business executive, who served as Principal Private Secretary to two successive prime ministers, Harold Macmillan and Sir Alec Douglas-Home
Early life
Bligh was born on 2 September 1918,[1] the only surviving son of Edward Clare Bligh (1887–1976), who was Chief Officer of Welfare Department, London County Council, 1932–51.[2] Bligh was educated at Winchester School and Balliol College, Oxford, graduating in 1940.[1]
Career
During the Second World War, Bligh served in the Royal Navy in the North Atlantic, the English Channel and the Mediterranean, and was twice wounded. He was awarded the DSC and bar and the DSO, and was appointed an OBE. Bligh joined the Civil Service in 1946 as an Assistant Principal in the Treasury, and was rapidly promoted, reaching the rank of Under-Secretary in 1959. That year he was appointed Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, whom he served until the latter's resignation in October 1963. Bligh then served Macmillan's successor, Sir Alec Douglas-Home in the same capacity, until Home's defeat in the 1964 British general election.[1]
In 1964 Bligh left the government's service to become a director of the media chain the Thomson Organisation, and became its Assistant Managing Director in 1966. He was briefly active in Conservative politics, as an alderman on the Greater London Council from 1967.[1] Bligh died at his home on 12 March 1969, after a long illness.[3]
Profumo affair
As the prime minister's Principal Private secretary Bligh was peripherally involved in the Profumo affair of 1963, a scandal which brought about the resignation of John Profumo as Secretary of State for War and destabilised the government. Before the affair broke, Bligh had been advised of the possibility that Profumo had compromised national security through a sexual affair with a 19-year-old showgirl, Christine Keeler, who was a known associate of the society osteopath Stephen Ward, a suspected Soviet sympathiser. Bligh interviewed Profumo, who denied any wrongdoing but asked if he should resign to avoid embarrassing the government. He was advised that he should not.[4] Later, when the affair was unravelling, Bligh met Ward, who by then, at the Home Office's instigation, was under police investigation regarding possible vice charges. Ward asked Bligh if there was anything that could be done to halt the investigation, which was proving ruinous to his practice. Bligh took no action.[5] In June 1963 when the scandal reached its climax, Macmillan being absent in Scotland it was to Bligh that Profumo first confessed his guilt, and it was Bligh who transmitted the contents of Profumo's resignation letter to the prime minister.[6]
Private life
Bligh married Ruth Pamela Robertson in 1945; there were two sons and one daughter from the marriage. In 1963 he was appointed a Knight Commander (KBE) in the Order of the British Empire, and adopted the style "Sir Timothy Bligh".[1]
References
- Citations
- "Bligh, Sir Timothy (James)". Who's Who online. Retrieved 17 February 2014. (subscription required)
- "Bligh, Sir Edward Clare". Who's Who online. Retrieved 17 February 2014. (subscription required)
- "Sir Timothy Bligh". The Montreal Gazette. 14 March 1969.
- Davenport-Hines, p. 267
- Davenport-Hines, pp. 287–88
- Knightley and Kennedy, pp. 186–87
- Sources
- Davenport-Hines, Richard (2013). An English Affair: Sex, Class and Power in the Age of Profumo. London: William Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-743585-2.
- Knightley, Phillip; Kennedy, Caroline (1987). An Affair of State: The Profumo Case and the Framing of Stephen Ward. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-224-02347-0.