Rowland Kenney
Rowland Kenney was a British diplomat, propagandist, author and editor. During World War I and World War II, Kenney directed British propaganda in Norway and Scandinavia.
Early life
Kenney was born on 28 December 1882 in Springhead, West Riding of Yorkshire. He was a son of Horatio Nelson Kenney, a cotton-mill worker, and Ann. He was one of twelve children, eleven of whom survived infancy. His sisters included the suffragettes Annie Kenney, Nell Kenney, Kitty Kenney, Jenny Kenney and Jessie Kenney. Their parents encouraged reading, debating, and socialism.Career
During his youth and early adulthood, Kenney worked a series of manual labour jobs, before beginning work as a salesman, and joining the Shop Assistants Union and the Independent Labour Party. His work for various socialist organisations resulted in him becoming a journalist and later an editor of the Daily Herald, and briefly a publisher of Vanity Fair.In 1911 Kenney married Dano-Norwegian Asta Ingrid Brockdorff and spent some time in Norway before the beginning of the First World War.
First World War
In 1916, with war raging in Europe, Kenney was recommended to the Foreign Office as an agent who could assess the propaganda situation in Norway. Having compiled a report, Kenney was subsequently offered the job of press attaché in the British Legation in Norway's capital Christiania. As press attaché, Kenney communicated with Norwegian editors and publishers and, while pretending to be a Reuters correspondent, supplied Norwegian media with British propaganda. He was also instrumental in eliminating German influence from the Norwegian Telegram Bureau.After World War I, Kenney, still working for the Foreign Office, travelled to Poland to assess the political situation and reported back to the British delegation for the Treaty of Versailles. Returning from Versailles to England in 1918, Kenney suffered an airplane crash and survived with lasting injuries. He continued during the inter-war years to work for various government institutions associated with the Foreign Office. In particular, he was a major operator for the establishment of the British Council. During this time, he wrote his autobiography Westering, published in 1939.