Edwards was born in
Alexandria, Egypt, the son of Juliet and Herbert, who was a partner in the shipping brokerage R. J. Moss & Co. After early schooling in Alexandria and Hastings he went to
Bradfield College. In his final year, on a visit to Oxford, he struck up a friendship with
John Mortimer, who became infatuated with him, leading to passionate letters from Mortimer. When found by a schoolmaster, in July 1942, these resulted in Mortimer being sent down from Oxford, and Edwards being "asked not to return" to Bradfield at the age of seventeen. He then went to work on a farm on the
Berkshire Downs, where he burnt the letters. He also worked briefly as an apprentice at the
British Thomson-Houston factory in Rugby before joining the
Royal Navy. His naval career commenced in January 1943 at
Edinburgh University on a six-month course for naval candidates, designed to turn schoolboys into officer material, where he was taught by
Dover Wilson amongst other lecturers. A friend and fellow student was
Peter Shand Kydd who, in 1969, became
Princess Diana's stepfather when he married Frances Spencer, the divorced wife of Viscount Althorp. After completing his basic training in August 1943, Ordinary Seaman Edwards was posted to
HMS London just in time to witness the ship's inspection by
King George VI. After a brief spell on the London and further training at
HMS King Alfred and elsewhere, in March 1944 he was promoted to midshipman and posted to the destroyer
HMS Fury. On 21 June 1944, having been part of the
D-Day bombardment force, HMS Fury detonated a ground mine off
Juno Beach and was forced to beach west of
Arromanches. Promotion to
Sub Lieutenant followed, along with a posting in January 1945 to
HMS Totland then being refitted at
Durban. His final posting from November 1945 was to
Landing Ship Tank HMS3504 in
Calcutta before being
demobbed at
Helensburgh in October 1946. ==Career==