The Daily Telegraph

Sue Lowther-pinkerton

‘Daughter of Empire’ raised on the North-west Frontier who served in the wartime ATS then MI5

- Sue Lowther-pinkerton, born September 9 1924, died December 24 2023

SUE LOWTHER-PINKERTON, who has died aged 99, was one of the last of the daughters of Empire brought up on the North-west Frontier of what was then India (now Pakistan), and immortalis­ed by Kipling in “The Ballad of East and West”.

She was born Susan Kathleen Leslie-smith on September 9 1924 in a rented room above a betting shop in Camberley where her father, Major Colin Leslie-smith of the Punjab Regiment, Indian Army, was attending the British Army Staff College.

Leslie-smith had served in the Great War in Mesopotami­a with the 14th Punjab Regiment and his brother Gilbert was killed in action with the 24th Punjab Regiment at Basra. Colin Leslie-smith also fought in a number of fierce campaigns on the Frontier including action in the Mohmand country in 1908 and Afghanista­n and Waziristan between 1919 and 1921.

In 1924 he returned to England, accompanie­d by his wife Kathleen, née Moxon, to attend the Staff College to prepare him for higher command.

The infant Susan was taken by ship to India, where the family lived in an Army cantonment at Peshawar, the capital of the North-west Frontier Province. She and the other British children, including her older brother Peter (later a Rajput officer who was to fight the Japanese in Burma), had adventurou­s upbringing­s and she had both a governess and a Rajput havildar (sergeant) to look after her.

Every child had a pony and they were never allowed outside without putting on a large sola topi to keep the sun off their head. During the hot weather the families were despatched to the cool of Kashmir.

At the age of six Susan was sent back to England. This was done not simply to obtain an education, but to get the children back to a kinder climate where there was less chance of their falling prey to the endemic diseases which took such a toll on the British in India before modern medicine.

Sent to school in Bexhill, she accepted the separation but missed the freedom of a Frontier childhood, and perhaps as a result became something of a rebellious young student. One year, when the school photograph was being taken, young Sue stood at one end of the back row. As the camera traversed from her end, during the long panoramic exposure, she decamped and ran around the rear rank and was photograph­ed again at the other end. Only when the photograph­s were printed and framed was the anomaly discovered and her father found himself presented with a bill for having the school photograph retaken.

On another occasion she sneaked into the teacher’s accommodat­ion armed with other girls’ dressing-gown cords and tied the door handles together, so it was some time before the staff were able to escape and as a result they missed Chapel. For this she was placed on a final warning.

At 15 she was obliged to leave school without qualificat­ions, but with a spirit unbroken, and possessed of confidence and a developing personalit­y. With the coming of war she worked on NAAFI vans dispensing “char and wads” to the troops and painting white lines on the roads until old enough to enlist in the Auxiliary Territoria­l Service (ATS) in 1942. Here she was trained as a driver on ambulances and 15cwt trucks.

Posted to the Royal School of Artillery at Larkhill, she drove gun limbers over the ranges and received an extra 4d per day in danger pay. On one occasion she drove over the control console for a firepower demonstrat­ion which had been left hidden in long grass. As a result, multiple charges were prematurel­y detonated. She defended herself at the subsequent inquiry and was exonerated when she stated that the real culprit was not her but the fool who had left the equipment hidden in long grass.

She was also employed as a motorcycle despatch rider, although she found the bikes extremely heavy and after every halt had to wait for a passing soldier to lift the bike up to enable her to resume her journey.

In December 1945 she was commission­ed and placed in charge of motor transport in Hounslow and later Colchester.

Leaving the Army in 1948, she went with her mother and stepfather to Singapore. Here she obtained work in Army intelligen­ce just as the Malayan Emergency was getting under way.

She remembered being trusted to handle secret communicat­ions concerning the imminent breakout by HMS Amethyst from its detention by Communist forces in the Yangtze river in 1949, a story immortalis­ed in the 1957 film starring Richard Todd, Yangtse Incident: The Story of HMS Amethyst.

Returning to the UK in 1951 she applied to the “War Office”, in reality the Security

Service (MI5), working at Leconfield House in Curzon Street, Mayfair. Like most of her generation, she steadfastl­y refused to divulge even the most minor details about her time with the Service. This was so even when she knew that her son, an officer in the Irish Guards and the Special Air Service, could be trusted with details about her brief career. The one time she talked to her family was to declare that the allegation­s that Sir Roger Hollis, whom she greatly admired, was a Soviet agent, were prepostero­us.

A renowned beauty, with abundant personalit­y, she received 11 proposals of marriage before accepting Anthony Hull Lowther-pinkerton, always known as “Rumpty”, an adventurou­s Anglo-irishman four years her junior.

Too young for the Second World War, Lowther-pinkerton had enlisted in the British South Africa Police in Rhodesia, but was invalided out after being thrown from a horse. Later he joined the Metropolit­an Police and served in Special Branch.

Sue remained in MI5 until leaving in 1956 to start a family. In 1961 they relocated to East Suffolk and thereafter she devoted herself to helping others. For almost 50 years she helped organise the annual Poppy Appeal and for several decades delivered meals-on-wheels to remote cottages and farmsteads.

Her wise counsel and kindness to those in need were renowned, and to many she became a second mother, maintainin­g her humour and optimism to the very end – along with her determinat­ion to say nothing of her time with the Security Service.

Sue Lowther-pinkerton’s husband predecease­d her and she is survived by her daughter Sarah, a retired barrister, and her son, Jamie, who served in the Irish Guards and the 22nd Special Air Service Regiment and is an Extra Equerry to the Prince and Princess of Wales.

 ?? ?? She was paid danger money to transport guns
She was paid danger money to transport guns

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