The Daily Telegraph

Michael Gordon Lennox

Expert on limpet mine checks who later ran Blind Veterans UK

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CAPTAIN MICHAEL GORDON LENNOX, who has died aged 85, led a national charity for blind ex-servicemen after a successful naval career during the Cold War.

In the late 1990s Gordon Lennox relieved Admiral Sir Henry Leach as chairman of St Dunstan’s, a charity set up during the First World War. Under Gordon Lennox’s leadership, a new, vigorous chief executive was chosen, and the charity expanded from a single training, care, convalesce­nt and holiday centre near Brighton to others in Llandudno and Sheffield. Soldiers blinded in the Iraq and Afghanista­n campaigns were admitted, and the charity expanded to include service people who had lost their sight through natural causes.

In 2012, on retiring from the chairmansh­ip, he changed the charity’s name to Blind Veterans UK, to ensure that its work would be better understood. He was awarded the OBE for his services to the charity.

By then Gordon Lennox had become a familiar face on television, seen every year, in his bowler hat, arms linked with a blind serviceman, as he led the St Dunstan’s contingent past the Cenotaph on Remembranc­e Sunday.

Michael Charles Gordon Lennox was born in Knightsbri­dge, London, to Rear-admiral Sir Alexander Gordon Lennox, KCVO, DSO, latterly Serjeant at Arms of the House of Commons, and Barbara Steele, daughter of Lieutenant General Julian Steele. He was educated at Wellesley House and Eton, joining Dartmouth in 1957.

His first ship was the frigate Salisbury on the Far East station, before he was appointed in 1960 to the Royal Yacht Britannia, which he described as a “hotbed of excellence”. He was on board for the royal visits to Tunis, Northern Ireland and Ghana, and for Cowes Week. His first command was the inshore minesweepe­r Squirrel (196264) on fishery protection duties, which included a three-day visit to Paris.

During the Indonesian Confrontat­ion, he was aide-de-camp to the Commander-in-chief, Far East, based in Singapore, before returning to sea in the destroyer Cavalier.

In 1967-68 he specialise­d in anti-submarine warfare, then served at the Admiralty Surface Weapons Establishm­ent, and other ASW appointmen­ts ashore and afloat, until he commanded the frigate Active in 1978-80. During the Falklands War he served on the staff of the Commanderi­n-chief, Fleet Admiral Sir John Fieldhouse.

Subsequent­ly Gordon Lennox was head of the operations and training faculty at the school of maritime operations and he ended his career as Captainin-charge, Hong Kong (1990-92), and Commodore of the Admiralty Interview Board (1992-93).

Having qualified as a shallow-water diver in 1960, he devised a new method of searching a ship’s bottom for limpet mines while serving in the guided missile destroyer Kent (1963-64). Using a “necklace” of divers, guided port and starboard by swimmers on the surface, it was both quicker and more certain than earlier methods. For this invention, he was given a prize, “the princely sum of £37 and some pennies”, but his system became standard practice throughout Nato.

After the Navy, he was head of the naval personnel vetting organisati­on, based in Portsmouth, until it moved to York. Besides St Dunstan’s, he supported local charities including the Midhurst branch of the Royal British Legion and was secretary of the Coastal Forces Heritage Trust.

A tall, upright, imposing figure with a ready sense of humour, whose calm confidence sparked self-belief in others, he was much respected by his subordinat­es.

In 1974 Gordon Lennox married Jenny Gibbs, now Dame Jennifer Gordon Lennox, DCVO, who served as lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother and then to the late Queen. Jenny survives him with their two daughters and son.

Captain Michael Gordon Lennox, born September 30 1938, died January 10 2024

 ?? ?? His invention of a ‘necklace’ of divers became Nato standard
His invention of a ‘necklace’ of divers became Nato standard

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