Educated at
St Marylebone Grammar School and the
University of London, Kenyon began working for his family's company, the undertakers J. H. Kenyon. He also followed his father, Sir Harold Kenyon, into Conservative Party politics. When he was 24 years old, Kenyon was elected to
Paddington Borough Council, becoming an
alderman in 1938. At the
1946 London County Council election, he succeeded his father as a Conservative Party councillor for
Paddington South. From 1950 until 1952, he was
Mayor of Paddington. In 1952, he became leader of the Conservative Party group on the London County Council, and as such, leader of the opposition, remaining in the post until his death. Kenyon never stood for Parliament, but spent his spare time serving on various committees: the
Bracknell New Town Development Corporation, the Court of the University of London, and as a magistrate in Paddington. In 1955, he was knighted. ==References==