Background and family life
Blair was born at the Queen Mary Maternity Home in
Edinburgh,
Scotland on
6 May 1953, the second son of
Leo and Hazel Blair (
née Corscadden). Leo Blair, the son of two English actors, had been adopted by a Glasgow shipyard worker named James Blair and his wife Mary as a baby. Hazel Corscadden was the daughter of George Corscadden, a butcher and
Orangeman who had moved to Glasgow in 1916 but returned to (and died in)
Ballyshannon in 1923, where his wife Sarah Margaret neé Lipsett gave birth to Blair's mother Hazel above her family's
grocery shop. George Corscadden was from a family of
Protestant farmers in
County Donegal,
Ireland, who descended from
Scottish settlers that took their family name from
Garscadden, now part of
Glasgow. The Blair family was often taken on holiday to
Rossnowlagh, a beach resort near Hazel's hometown of Ballyshannon which is the venue of the main
Orange order parade in the
Republic of Ireland. Tony Blair has one elder brother,
William Blair, who is a
barrister and
Queen's Counsel (QC), and a younger sister, Sarah. Blair spent the first 19 months of his life at the family home in Paisley Terrace in the
Willowbrae area of Edinburgh. During this period his father worked as a junior tax inspector whilst also studying for a law degree from the
University of Edinburgh. His family spent three and a half years in the 1950s living in
Adelaide,
Australia, where his father was a lecturer in law at the
University of Adelaide. The Blairs lived close to the university, in the suburb of
Dulwich.
The family returned to Britain in the late 1950s, living for a time with Hazel Blair's stepfather William McClay and her mother at their home in
Stepps, near Glasgow. He spent the remainder of his childhood in
Durham,
England, his father being by then a lecturer at
Durham University. After attending Durham's
Chorister School from 1961 to 1966, Blair boarded at
Fettes College, a notable
independent school in Edinburgh, where he met
Charlie Falconer (a pupil at the rival
Edinburgh Academy), whom he later appointed
Lord Chancellor. He reportedly modelled himself on
Mick Jagger. His teachers were unimpressed with him: his biographer, John Rentoul reported that, "All the teachers I spoke to when researching the book said he was a complete pain in the backside, and they were very glad to see the back of him". Blair was arrested at Fettes, having being mistaken for a burglar as he climbed into his dormitory using a ladder, after being out late.
After Fettes, Blair spent a year in London, where he attempted to find fame as a
rock music promoter, before going up to the
University of Oxford to
read jurisprudence at
St John's College. As a student, he played
guitar and sang for a
rock band called
Ugly Rumours. During this time, he dated future
American Psycho director
Mary Harron. Whilst at Oxford, Blair's mother Hazel died of cancer which was said to have greatly affected Blair. After graduating from Oxford with a
second class degree, Blair became a member of
Lincoln's Inn, enrolled as a pupil barrister and met his future wife,
Cherie Booth (daughter of the actor
Tony Booth) at the
Chambers founded by
Derry Irvine (who was to be Blair's first Lord Chancellor),
11 King's Bench Walk Chambers. He acted predominantly for employers or wealthier clients, as in
Nethermere v. Gardiner where he unsuccessfully defended employers that had refused holiday pay to employees at a trouser factory. Rentoul records that, according to his lawyer friends, Blair was much less concerned about which party he was affiliated with than about his aim of becoming
Prime Minister.
Blair married Booth, a practising
Roman Catholic and future
Queen's Counsel, on
29 March 1980. They have four children (
Euan,
Nicky,
Kathryn and
Leo). Leo (born
20 May 2000) was the first legitimate child born to a serving Prime Minister in over 150 years, since Francis Russell was born to
Lord John Russell on
11 July 1849.
Although the Blairs stated that they had wished to shield their children from the media, Euan and Nicky's education was a cause of political controversy. They both attended the Roman Catholic
London Oratory School, criticised by left-wingers for its selection procedures, instead of a poorly-performing
Roman Catholic school in Labour-controlled
Islington, where they then lived, in Richmond Avenue. There was further criticism when it was revealed that Euan received private coaching from staff from
Westminster School.