Background
Lionel Fraser was born in London, the second of four children of Scotsman Harry Fraser and Alice Barnard.
Lionel Fraser was born in London, the second of four children of Scotsman Harry Fraser and Alice Barnard.
Lionel Fraser attended Street Mary Abbots higher grade church school in Kensington, London, but he also attended other schools from time to time, as his parents moved around the United Kingdom for work.
Aged thirteen, Fraser received a scholarship to attend Pitman"s School, which was where he received intensive training in French, German, Spanish, as well as in shorthand, typing, and accounts. In June 1911 at the age of sixteen, Fraser joined Bonn & Company, a small bank specializing in foreign exchange transactions. There he was responsible for correspondence and bookkeeping.
Fraser"s business career was interrupted when his territorial regiment mobilized on the outbreak of war in 1914.
Although commissioned as an officer in 1915, Fraser had to leave his regiment due to an injury suffered in a football match. During the remainder of the war Fraser worked in naval intelligence.
By the time World World War II started, Fraser had worked his way up to numerous business leadership roles on a national scale. During the war, he traded foreign currency while serving as an advisor to the United Kingdom Treasury.
He became a director of Thomas Tilling, Tube Investments and Babcock, and chairman of the merchant bank Herbert Wagg.
In 1963, he published his memoirs, All to the Good.
Other titles included Chelsea Borough Councillor, Trustee of the Tate Gallery, Liveryman of the Fishmongers" Company, and member of White"son