Grey Ruthven, 2nd Earl of Gowrie


Alexander Patrick Greysteil Ruthven, 2nd Earl of Gowrie, , usually known as Grey Gowrie, is a Scottish hereditary peer. He was a Conservative Party politician for some years, including a period in the British Cabinet, and was later Chairman of Sotheby's and of the Arts Council of England. He has also published poetry. Lord Gowrie is the hereditary Clan Chief of Clan Ruthven.

Life

Early life and education

Lord Gowrie was born in Dublin, Ireland, the elder son of Major The Hon. Patrick Hore-Ruthven, only surviving son of The 1st Baron Gowrie and his wife Lady Gowrie. His mother was Pamela Margaret Fletcher. His younger brother is Malise Ruthven.
His father was killed in action in 1942, at which point he became his grandfather's heir apparent. When his grandfather, who had been the Governor-General of Australia, was created Earl of Gowrie in 1945, he became known by the courtesy title Viscount Ruthven of Canberra. He was educated at Eton and Balliol College, Oxford, and later at Harvard University.

Titles

The young Lord Ruthven succeeded to the Earldom of Gowrie, named for the old Scottish area of Gowrie around Perth, on the death of his grandfather on 2 May 1955; at the same time he succeeded as the 2nd Viscount Ruthven of Canberra, and 2nd Baron Gowrie of Canberra and of Dirleton. On 16 April 1956, he further succeeded his great-uncle The 10th Lord Ruthven of Freeland as the 3rd Baron Ruthven of Gowrie. He matriculated his coat of arms in 1959.

Ireland and Wales

Gowrie inherited Castlemartin House and Estate at Kilcullen, County Kildare, Ireland, from his great-aunt Sheelagh Blacker in 1967, and later sold it to Tony O'Reilly, to whom he also sold his Dublin home on Fitzwilliam Square. He lived partly in Ireland until 1983, and then moved to the Welsh Marches, while also maintaining a London residence for much of the period.

Political career

Gowrie joined the Conservative front bench under Ted Heath in 1972 as a Lord-in-waiting, a post he held until 1974. He later served under Margaret Thatcher as Minister of State for Employment between 1979 and 1981, and as Minister of State for Northern Ireland between 1981 and 1983 at the Northern Ireland Office. In 1983 he was sworn of the Privy Council and entered the Cabinet as Minister for the Arts, which he remained until 1985. He was also Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster between 1984 and 1985. Despite being offered the post of Secretary of State for Education and Science he resigned from the Cabinet in 1985, stating that it was impossible for him to live in London on the £33,000 salary provided for the post.

Later career

After leaving government, Gowrie became Chairman of Sotheby's and later of the Arts Council of England - described as "the appointment of a Scot, born in Ireland and living in Wales" to a key English post. At the Arts Council, he secured the role as a distributor of funds from the National Lottery.
Gowrie lectured on English and American literature at Harvard and University College, London. He was Provost of the Royal College of Art. He also made a number of television appearances, including in documentaries on Francis Bacon, artist and British folk revivalist and blues pioneer Rory McEwen, and the National Theatre, as well as multiple episodes of Question Time.
Gowrie is a patron of the Elton John AIDS Foundation. Together with Rowan Williams and Daniel Day-Lewis, he is a patron of the Wilfred Owen Association, formed in 1989 to commemorate the life and work of the renowned World War I poet Wilfred Owen. He was also a founding director of the British Friends of the National Gallery of Ireland.

Writings

Gowrie published one volume of poetry in his 20s, Postcard from Don Giovanni, after a period working as an assistant to American poet Robert Lowell, and later co-authored a book on British painting, The Genius of British Painting, published in 1975.
In the summer of 1999, having been diagnosed with a serious heart condition, he received a heart transplant at Harefield Hospital and, after a long recovery, left hospital in 2000; his health has remained frail since. He became friends with his principal surgeon, Magdi Yacoub, and now chairs the institute named for him. Following his release from hospital, he published his first book of poetry for decades, The Domino Hymn, which contains references to his illness - the title refers to the fact that he was a "domino patient", i.e. one who received a heart from a fellow patient undergoing a heart-and-lung transplant. He later also released Third Day with a mix of new and collected poetry.
He was elected in 2003 a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature In January 2009, Gowrie accepted Farad Azima's invitation to chair the Advisory Board of the Iran Heritage Foundation.

Personal life

Family

Lord Gowrie married Alexandra Bingley, daughter of Colonel Robert Bingley, on 1 November 1962. They had one son:
Lord Gowrie and Alexandra Bingley divorced in 1974.
On 2 November 1974, Gowrie married Adelheid Gräfin von der Schulenburg, sixth and youngest child and fifth and youngest daughter of Fritz-Dietlof Graf von der Schulenburg, a German Graf and one of the leaders of the 1944 plot to assassinate Hitler, and his wife Charlotte Kotelmann.

Friends

Gowrie remained friends with Lowell, his poetic mentor, and was a pallbearer at his funeral. He has also been closely associated with Edward Plunkett, the Anglo-Irish painter, and is godfather to one of his sons, and purchaser of the Kent house of his famous grandfather, the writer Lord Dunsany.