Background
Fraser was born of a Scottish father and English mother and brought up in England.
literary editor officer publisher
Fraser was born of a Scottish father and English mother and brought up in England.
He was educated at Oundle School and Street John"s College, Cambridge.
Through his eponymous gallery, he is considered to have "revolutionized greetings card design and quality". A student of F. R. Leavis, he founded, while still an undergraduate, The Minority Press, which published chiefly essays of Leavis and works of other Cambridge students from 1930 to 1933. The role of Fraser and The Minority Press in British literary criticism has been described by Ian Duncan MacKillop.
In 1935, Fraser set up a bookshop in Portugal Place, Cambridge, combining it with a small gallery of fine art prints, and in 1938 he introduced his first Christmas greetings cards.
He founded a greetings card company bearing his name, the Gordon Fraser Gallery, which was located on Fitzroy Road, Primrose Hill, London. During the Second World War he served as an intelligence officer in north Africa and worked with the partisan underground in Yugoslavia.
He was Head of Radio for United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization from 1948 to 1954. He resigned to return to the Gordon Fraser Gallery, and later founded two other publishing houses, The Fraser Press and Gordon Fraser, that specialized in off-beat topics.
Fraser was killed in an automobile accident in June 1981.
The Gordon Fraser Charitable Trust, created in 1966, makes donations to charities, considering applications quarterly.