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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Letters

Naval superstition no defence against Dreadnought reporter Clare Hollingworth

Clare Hollingworth stands in front of barbed wire with a ship in the background
Clare Hollingworth, the British journalist who broke the news of the Nazi invasion of Poland, had to fight to be allowed to visit HMS Dreadnought in 1963. Photograph: The Daily Telegraph/PA

Among her many journalistic exploits, Clare Hollingworth (Obituary, 11 January) should be credited with a notable feminist victory over the Ministry of Defence. I was among a group of correspondents invited for a trip on HMS Dreadnought, Britain’s first nuclear submarine, soon after it was commissioned in 1963. An invitation to Clare, who was also newly launched as a defence correspondent, ran into trouble when Dreadnought crew insisted that women were never allowed aboard submarines because they brought bad luck.

As I recall, the issue was discussed at a senior admiralty level before Clare was allowed to join us. Her only concession was to wear trousers when she climbed aboard.
Alexander MacLeod
London

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