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George Dryd - George Dryd | Colin Perkel/The Canadian Press

George Dryd

George Dryd - George Dryd | Colin Perkel/The Canadian Press
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George Dryden still determined to prove he’s Diefenbaker’s son

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

Sit yourself down for an intriguing Canadian potboiler, a story that involves allegations of a clandestine, one-last-time tryst with a former prime minister, millions of dollars, bitter antipathy toward the man who raised him, a mother on the edge of dementia, and – steady now – an uncanny similarity of jowls.

And all of it is sitting here in front of me, wearing a suit, powerful cologne and a cloak of indignation.

The man who would be John George Diefenbaker II, if he can get DNA tests to prove it, is telling his story in a breakfast joint on Bloor Street in Toronto, where he knows the waitresses by name and favours thick slices of white toast, washed down with dishwater coffee.

“Absolutely I would change my name [to Diefenbaker],” says George Dryden, straightening his collar a bit. “That’s what I am. I’m not a Dryden. They hate me. And I wouldn’t change it to Smith. Or Goldenberg,” he scoffs, surprised that anyone would question his desire to change his surname.

George Dryden’s story begins with his mother, Mary Lou Lonergan, an entertainer/socialite who was involved in conservative political associations in the sixties. She was single, in her 30s and reportedly “adored” Mr. Diefenbaker, who was married and more than 30 years her senior. There are photographs of them together at public events.

In 1967, she married Gordon Dryden. But her son believes that when she returned to Toronto from a six-week European honeymoon in the late fall of that year, she had a meeting with Mr. Diefenbaker, on the brink of retirement as leader of the opposition. (His six-year run as prime minister had ended in 1963.) “I think this was one last goodbye, and one thing led to another. Three months after she was married, I was conceived by Diefenbaker,” alleges Mr. Dryden. The question of his paternity is related to a $30-million lawsuit, launched in 2010, against the man who raised him, Gordon Dryden, his mother and his brother, Barrie. He claims that Gordon Dryden knew or suspected that he was not his biological father and therefore not only mistreated him but breached his fiduciary duties, cutting him out of a windfall inheritance from an uncle’s estate. The lawsuit was dismissed late last year except for a defamation claim against Gordon Dryden. Lawyers for George Dryden are appealing the judgment.

“I never had a hug from Gordon Dryden. We were never close,” he says, adding that their antagonism worsened when he became a teenager. A paternity test in June last year proved that Mr. Dryden is not his biological father. The suggestion that he is Mr. Diefenbaker’s only biological son – Canada’s 13th prime minister had no children from either of his two marriages – was long rumored by members of Mr. Dryden’s family, because of similarities in appearance.

An attempt to get DNA samples from artifacts at Saskatchewan’s Diefenbaker Canada Centre came back inconclusive in late December. Members of the extended Diefenbaker family have so far refused to co-operate with information or DNA samples. “They’re worried about legacy...I’m not suing the Diefenbaker estate [for money],” he explains, indignant at the very thought. “The estate has been wound up for 35 years. And even if I could, I don’t think he had any money.”

The woman who could help clarify the facts, his mother, 77, is ailing and being kept from him by Gordon Dryden, a wealthy patriarch in his 80s, he says. “If I can spend an hour or two with her over a few days, she would tell me. I know that for a fact.” He saw her briefly last June and even though doctors said she was suffering from dementia, she was lucid, he explains.

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