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Obit in the Times of 9 May 2025:
E X T R A C T
Earl of Donoughmore obituary: pioneer of handheld transistor radio
Doctor who turned to business and became part of the Swinging Sixties radio craze with the launch of Perdio
An advertisement in The Times led to Michael Hely Hutchinson, the future eighth Earl of Donoughmore, becoming a driving force behind the 1960s craze for brightly coloured portable transistor radios to listen to pop music from the North Sea pirate radio stations. But within a few years the business over-extended and went bust.
Under the courtesy title Viscount Suirdale, Hely Hutchinson was a medical doctor who turned to business to pay his four sons’ school fees. The advert was placed by Derek Willmott, a former wartime RAF pilot who had discovered that the transistors used to power radar detectors could be adapted for radio…
… In return for investing £500, the softly spoken Suirdale took a controlling stake and became chairman and managing director. They started production in 1957, also making portable television sets, but that proved too far ahead of its time… the firm was [eventually] liquidated owing £926,380… Ironically, Perdio radios are now prized by collectors, and there is a lively trade on eBay.
Richard Michael John Hely Hutchinson, known as Mick, was born in 1927, the son of John Hely Hutchinson, the seventh Earl of Donoughmore, a wartime Tory MP for Peterborough, and Dorothy Jean Hotham, who was in charge of the Red Cross in London’s East End during the Second World War. She worked with Edwina Mountbatten and in 1947 was appointed MBE. In 1974 John and Dorothy were kidnapped for four days by the Provisional IRA and released when their members ended a prison hunger strike.
Mick’s younger brother is Mark Hely Hutchinson, the former chief executive of the Bank of Ireland, and they had a sister, Sara. They were sent to America during the Second World War to stay with relatives and attend Groton School in Massachusetts, where Mick discovered an interest in sciences...
… In 1951 he married Sheila (née Parsons), a nurse he had met when he was training at St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington, west London. She died of complications from kidney failure in 1999.
Mick and Sheila had four sons: John, Timothy, Nicholas and Ralph. John, who became Viscount Suirdale and is now the ninth Earl, was an executive with Dunhill and Burberry in Asia. Tim has run Headline Books, later Hodder Headline, which his father chaired from 1986 to 1997. Nicholas is an artist and Ralph a stockbroker. A shooting friend introduced Mick to Margaret “Meg” Morgan (née Stonehouse) and they married in 2001…
… Hely Hutchinson retired largely because of Sheila’s kidney failure. They moved to the Oxfordshire village of Bampton to be near Oxford’s John Radcliffe infirmary, an early specialist in renal treatment. Mick operated a home dialysis machine until she could receive a kidney transplant. He succeeded to his father’s titles in 1981 and sat in the House of Lords under the UK peerage Viscount Hutchinson, contributing to health debates but losing his seat after the House of Lords Act 1999 restricted the number of hereditary peers…
The Earl of Donoughmore, doctor and businessman, was born on August 8, 1927. He died on April 25, 2025, aged 97
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/obituaries/article/earl-of-donoughmore-5c8p09t2rEarldom of Donoughmore, Viscountcy of Donoughmore and Barony of Donoughmore in the Peerage of Ireland The Lord Chancellor reported that John Michael James Hely Hutchinson (otherwise known as Viscount Suirdale) had established his claim to the Earldom of Donoughmore, the Viscountcy of Donoughmore and the Barony of Donoughmore in the Peerage of Ireland.