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Alastair Dunnett

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Nationality
  
Scottish

Spouse
  
Dorothy Dunnett (m. 1946)

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Alastair Dunnett



Born
  
26 December 1908 (
1908-12-26
)

Known for
  
Journalist and Newspaper editor

Children
  
Ninian DunnettMungo Dunnett

Died
  
September 2, 1998, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Books
  
Quest by canoe, Among friends, No thanks to the Duke, End of Term, The Canoe Boys, Highlands and Islands of Scotland

Alastair dunnett top 5 facts


Sir Alastair MacTavish Dunnett (26 December 1908 – 2 September 1998) was a Scottish journalist and newspaper editor. He edited The Daily Record newspaper for nine years and The Scotsman newspaper from 1956 to 1972. In 1975 he became chairman of Thomson Scottish Petroleum and was much involved in the establishment of the oil terminal at Flotta in Orkney. From the 1950s to the 1980s he was involved in many Scottish cultural activities including being governor of the Pitlochry Festival Theatre (1958–1984). He was awarded an honorary degree of LLD by the University of Strathclyde in 1978 and was knighted on 4 July 1995.

He published a book of short stories (Heard tell, 1947), a description of a kayaking voyage round the coast of Scotland (Quest by canoe, 1950, republished in 1969 as It's too late in the year and in 1996 as The canoe boys), several books on Scottish topics and an autobiography (Among friends, 1984).

Dunnett married Dorothy Halliday on 17 September 1946; as Dorothy Dunnett she was a celebrated artist and historical novelist, author of the Lymond Chronicles and The House of Niccolo. They had two sons, Ninian and Mungo.

References

Alastair Dunnett Wikipedia


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