We're at war: Death at 105 of reporter who broke scoop of the century
War correspondent Clare Hollingworth died in Hong Kong on Tuesday, the Foreign Correspondents’ Club (FCC) of Hong Kong said.
It said: “The FCC is very sad to announce the passing of its much beloved member Clare Hollingworth at age 105.
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Hide Ad“Clare had a remarkable career as a foreign correspondent, beginning with the scoop of the century when she reported the start of World War II.”
Tara Joseph, president of the FCC, added: “We are very sad to hear about Clare’s passing. She was a tremendous inspiration to us all and a treasured member of our club. We were so pleased that we could celebrate her 105th birthday with her this past year.”
Details of the funeral arrangements and a wake at the club will be announced later.
Ms Hollingworth lived in Hong Kong for the last 40 years after working from Beijing in the 1970s.
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Hide AdShe spent much of her career reporting for newspapers in the UK on major conflicts around the world.
It was in 1939, as a rookie reporter in Poland, that she got her major scoop.
After borrowing a diplomat’s car she drove into German-held territory where she saw tanks, artillery and armoured cars.
When the Nazis launched their invasion in September she informed her newspaper and British diplomats, holding the telephone out of the window so they could hear it for themselves.
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Hide AdHollingworth, then 27, was just three days into her first job in journalism, working as a cub reporter for the Daily Telegraph - a job she landed after a chance encounter with the newspaper’s editor earlier that summer.
But a year before, the young political activist, who was born in Leicester in 1911, was working with a charity in Europe that helped save thousands of refugees from the Nazis.
She booked a Christmas holiday to Kitzbuhel in Austria in 1938, but instead carried out reconnaissance in the ski resort, acquiring a Nazi-approved visa that would allow her to work for the British Committee for Refugees from Czechoslovakia.
Sent to Katowice, she led an operation to help refugees get visas to come to Britain and beyond, interviewing them and verifying their papers, as well as helping them with housing and food.
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Hide AdDocuments held at the National Archives at Kew, west London, reveal she wrote scores of letters and telegrams asking for money and approved visas, and it is estimated she helped between 2,000 and 3,000 people get to the UK.
But her work was abruptly shut down in July 1939, with letters from MI5 suggesting there were complaints from those in the corridors of power that “undesirables” such as Germans, Jews and communists were arriving in Britain with visas signed by her.
Hollingworth was also at the centre of another of the great stories of the 20th century - the Cambridge spy ring.
In the early 1960s she became convinced that British spy Kim Philby was part of the spy group that included Donald Maclean and Guy Burgess.
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Hide AdIn 1963 she wrote that Philby had defected to Russia, the BBC said, only to have her story for the Guardian put on hold for three months.
During her career Hollingworth reported from conflict zones all around the world, from Palestine to Vietnam, as well as covering the Chinese cultural revolution and the Algerian civil war, and was credited with the first and last interviews with the Shah of Iran.
In an interview with the Telegraph in 2011 she explained her fascination with war, saying: “I’m not brave, I just enjoy it.”
Her body of work still holds the admiration of journalists today.
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Hide AdPaying tribute to her, Chris Evans, the Telegraph’s editor, said: “Clare Hollingworth was a remarkable journalist, an inspiration to all reporters but in particular to subsequent generations of women foreign correspondents.
“She will always be revered by all of us at The Telegraph. Our sympathies to her friends and family.”