Richard Patrick Tallentyre Gibson, Baron Gibson (5 February 1916 – 20 April 2004) was a
British businessman in the publishing industry, and later arts
administrator.
Gibson was educated at
Eton and
Magdalen College, Oxford. He became a
stockbroker in 1937, and he joined the
Middlesex Yeomanry on the outbreak of the
Second World War. He served in North Africa, but was captured at
Derna in
Libya in April 1941. He was held as a
prisoner-of-war at
Camp 41 near
Parma in northern Italy, where he shared a room with
Edward Tomkins and
Nigel Strutt, all three becoming firm friends. Strutt was repatriated on medical grounds, and Gibson and Tomkins were moved to another camp. He and Tomkins escaped from the new camp, and spent 81 days walking south to
Bari, crossing the
Apennines and German lines, to return to
Allied-held territory. Gibson then served with
Special Operations Executive and the
Foreign Office.
He married Dione Pearson in 1945, a member of the
Pearson PLC dynasty and granddaughter of
Weetman Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray and of 1st
Baron Brabourne. Gibson joined the family's Westminster Press group of regional newspapers in 1947 as a trainee journalist, rapidly rising up through the business, consolidating and expanding its media interests. He became a director of the
Financial Times,
The Economist, and of Pearson, and chairman of
Pearson Longman in 1967, and of the
Financial Times in 1975. He was chairman of the Pearson group from 1978 to 1983.
He was a member of...
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