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Lord Thomas Edward Driberg, 1st baron Bradwell
(1905 - August 12, 1976) U.K.

Tom Driberg

Journalist and Member of Parliament

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He was from a middle class family but was very aware of poor living conditions of the local working class families in his village. His father, John James Street Driberg, spent his entire career in India, first in the Army and then in the Indian civil service where he became Chief of Police and Inspector of Jails for the Province of Assam. He died in 1919 when Tom Driberg was 14. His mother was Amy Mary who belonged to the Bell clan of Dumfriesshire. He had two brothers, Jack Herbert and James Douglas Driberg, who were 15 and 17 years older than him.

He was sent to the independent fee-paying boys' preparatory school at Crowborough, Sussex. He then went as a day-boy to a local school called the Grange. It was here at the age of eleven where he began sexual experimentation with other boys. He then went to Lancing where he came to know Evelyn Waugh. While at Lancing he started to take an interest in politics and to develop socialist leanings. During one of the holidays he joined the Brighton branch of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Two of the other boys at Lancing complained to the housemaster about Tom Driberg's unwelcome advances. He was punished and left Lancing a term early under a cloud.

For a few months he worked as a schoolmaster, teaching English at a preparatory school in Bournemouth. He went to Christ Church, Oxford, and began to take part in the decadent lifestyle. Tom Driberg's closest (but chaste) friendship at Oxford was with W. H. Auden. During his time at Oxford Tom Driberg heard Gertrude Stein speak, and he wrote to Virginia Woolf suggesting that the Hogarth Press publish the lecture, which it did. He wrote for the Cherwell magazine, including film reviews, reports on antiquarian books, and rude jokes. Edith Sitwell urged him to write poetry and included one of his poems in a lecture. He squandered much of his allowance from his mother on extravagances. To supplement his income he spent a week as a pavement artist around London. He left Oxford in 1927 without completing his degree.

He moved to London and took a top-floor room in Frith Street. He signed on with Jay theatrical employment agency in Shaftesbury Avenue. However, he soon had no money to pay rent, but was fortunate to find an all-night café in Church Street (later Romily Street) where he was given a job as a waiter from 6 pm to 6 am. He slept upstairs with the two other workers. Above them was a brothel. He found that he was having to deal with a motley bunch of customers and to some extent this cured him of his shyness.

This was a happy period for him but when Edith Sitwell got to know of his circumstances she was horrified and arranged for Beverley Baxter, who was managing editor of the Daily Express to consider him for a job, and in January 1928 he was taken on as a reporter. Within a month he had a scoop when he discovered the arrival of the Moral Re-Armament movement. The story was run on for several days starting on the front page on 28th. February, 1928. He continued to take an interest in the movement and in the 1950s was invited to lecture on the subject at Oslo and Göteborg universities.

After a few months Tom Driberg was transferred to help Peter Sewell write his column of social gossip Talk of London. After Peter Sewell retired Tom Driberg took over. In May 1933 the proprietor Lord Beaverbrook (Max Aitken) decided that the column should be replaced by something in the style used by Time magazine in the USA. The new column was headed These Names Make News. Then Lord Beaverbrook decided that it should be signed pseudonymously as William Hickey after the late eighteenth century diarist. Tom Driberg wrote the column until 1943, but also did much travelling to cover major news stories.

In the autumn of 1935 he gave two unemployed miners a place with him in his bed, but when his hands began to wander the men went to report him at the local police station. On 12th. November 1935 Tom Driberg ended up in court at the Old Bailey on a charge of indecent assault, but he was found not guilty. In 1940 Tom Driberg was invited to lunch by Lady Astor, MP at Cliveden. One of the other guests was T. E. Lawrence.. Tom Driberg was shown T. E. Lawrence's manuscript of The Mint about his time in the RAF.

In about 1941 Tom Driberg was expelled from the Communist Party, although he was never told why. However, this turned out to be useful when he was campaigning to become an MP. In 1942 he was elected as an independent MP for Maldon in Essex. Three years later he held the seat as a Labour MP, and in 1950 he was elected as the Labour MP for Barking.

He left the Express in June 1943 after being sacked by the editor who thought that his parliamentary activities conflicted with his journalism. He was then given a job by Bill Richardson, the editor of Reynold News, a left-wing Sunday newspaper belonging to the Co-operative movement. He wrote a column under his own name which was more political. The paper became the Sunday Citizen in 1962, but in 1966 Tom Driberg was sacked because the paper could no longer afford his salary. He subsequently worked freelance.

He had a lucky escape when caught in the middle of sexual activities with a Norwegian sailor in an air raid shelter in Edinburgh. Fortunately the policeman was an avid reader of the William Hickey column and let him off. In fact the policeman and Tom Driberg became friends and exchanged letters.

In 1949 the Labour Party conference elected him to the National Executive Committee, and he was re-elected every year from 1950 to 1972. In January 1954 he visited Rupert Croft-Cooke who was in Brixton prison after a conviction for gross indecency.

In 1956 Tom Driberg was temporarily out of Parliament and was working more or less full-time as a journalist. He travelled to Moscow to see the spy Guy Burgess to get the story of his disappearance from London with Donald Maclean. The story appeared in Guy Burgess: A Portrait with Background.

Tom Driberg was chair of the Labour Party in 1957 - 1958. In 1965 he was appointed as a Privy Counsellor. He had been an MP for thirty years when he retired in February 1974. In 1975 he was made a life peer and became Lord Bradwell. Tom Driberg died in London. His book Ruling Passions was published posthumously in London, by Jonathan Cape, in 1977.

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