Honorific-Prefix: | His Grace |
The Duke of Westminster | |
Office: | Lord Lieutenant of Cheshire Custos Rotulorum of Cheshire |
Term Start: | 19 December 1905 |
Term End: | 15 April 1920 |
Predecessor: | Earl Egerton |
Successor: | Sir William Bromley-Davenport |
Office1: | Member of the House of Lords as Duke of Westminster |
Term Start1: | 20 March 1900 |
Term End1: | 19 July 1953 |
Predecessor1: | The 1st Duke of Westminster |
Successor1: | The 3rd Duke of Westminster |
Birth Name: | Hugh Richard Arthur Grosvenor |
Birth Date: | 19 March 1879 |
Birth Place: | Eaton Hall, Cheshire, England[1] |
Nationality: | British |
Spouse: | |
Children: | Lady Ursula Vernon Edward Grosvenor, Earl Grosvenor Lady Mary Grosvenor |
Parents: | Victor Grosvenor, Earl Grosvenor Lady Sibell Lumley |
Hugh Richard Arthur Grosvenor, 2nd Duke of Westminster, (19 March 1879 – 19 July 1953), was a British landowner and one of the wealthiest individuals of his era. He was also noted for his support of Nazi ideology.
He was the son of Victor Grosvenor, Earl Grosvenor, the son of the 1st Duke of Westminster, and Lady Sibell Lumley, daughter of the 9th Earl of Scarborough. Lumley later remarried politician George Wyndham.[2]
Grosvenor was known within family circles as "Bendor",[3] which was also the name of the racehorse Bend Or, owned by his grandfather, the first Duke. Bend Or won The Derby in 1880, the year following Grosvenor's birth.[4]
The name is a jovial reference to the ancient lost armorials of the family: Azure, a bend or, which were awarded to the Scrope family in the famous case of 1389 heard before the Court of Chivalry, known as Scrope v Grosvenor.[5] [6]
His wife Loelia wrote in her memoirs: "Of course everybody, even his parents and sisters, would normally have addressed the baby as 'Belgrave' so they may have thought that any nickname was preferable. At all events it stuck, and my husband's friends never called him anything but Bendor or Benny".[7]
His ancestral country estate in Cheshire, the 54-bedroom Eaton Hall, consisted of 11000acres of parkland, gardens, and stables. The main residence included paintings by Goya, Rubens, Raphael, Rembrandt, Hals, and Velázquez among others. The Duke owned lodges in Scotland and France (the Château Woolsack) dedicated to the sport of hunting. According to his Times obituary (21 July 1953), "he was busy up to the day of his death in great schemes of afforestation in Cheshire, in the Lake District, and in Scotland."[8]
He owned two yachts, the Cutty Sark and the Flying Cloud. He owned 17 Rolls-Royce motor cars and a private train designed to facilitate travel from Eaton Hall directly into London, where his townhouse Grosvenor House was located.
Grosvenor House was later leased to the United States for use as the American Embassy.[9]
At the age of nineteen, he briefly attended a French boarding school run by the Count de Mauny, who was rumored to have made sexual advances towards some of its pupils.[10]
Lord Grosvenor had taken a commission with the Royal Horse Guards and was in South Africa serving in the Second Boer War when, in December 1899, he succeeded his grandfather. After a brief visit home, he returned in February 1900 to serve with the Imperial Yeomanry as an ADC to Lord Roberts and Lord Milner.[11] He resigned his commission in December 1901, and was appointed captain of the Cheshire (Earl of Chester's) Imperial Yeomanry the following month. After the war, he invested in land in South Africa and Rhodesia, and visited the colony with his wife in late 1902.[12] He was promoted to major in the Cheshire Yeomanry in 1906.[11]
In 1908, the Duke competed in the London Olympics as a motorboat racer for Great Britain.[13] On 1 April 1908, he was named honorary lieutenant-colonel of the 16th Battalion, the London Regiment, a post he held until 1915.
In the First World War the Duke volunteered for front-line combat and served with distinction. While attached to the Cheshire Yeomanry, he developed a prototype Rolls-Royce armoured car for use in France and Egypt. The Duke commanded the armoured cars of the regiment during their 1916 campaign in Egypt as part of the Western Frontier Force under General William Peyton. He took part in the destruction of a Senussi force at the action of Agagia on 26 February 1916.
On 14 March 1916, he led the armoured cars on a raid, destroying the enemy camp at Bir Asiso. Learning that the crews of HMT Moorina and HMS Tara were being held in poor conditions at Bir Hakeim, he led the nine armoured cars, together with three armed but un-armoured cars and a further 28 cars and ambulances, on the Bir Hakeim rescue: a 120miles dash across the desert. The Senussi captors attempted to run away but British rescuers gunned them down. The prisoners attempted to stop the killings but failed. They had subsisted on little more than the snails in which the region abounded, but said their captors had not been overly cruel. However, the chief jailor responsible for the snail diet, a Muslim cleric nicknamed "Holy Joe", was hanged to general approval.[14]
The Duke received the Distinguished Service Order for his exploits in 1916.[11] He was subsequently promoted to colonel, and on 26 May 1917, he was named honorary colonel of the regiment.
He was appointed Knight Grand Cross, Royal Victorian Order (G.C.V.O.) in 1907.
He held the office of Lord-Lieutenant of Cheshire between 1907 and 1920.[11]
In Monte Carlo in 1923, Grosvenor was introduced to Coco Chanel by Vera Bate Lombardi. His affair with Chanel lasted ten years.[15] The duke gave her extravagant jewels, costly art, and purchased a home for Chanel in London's prestigious Mayfair district, and in 1927 gave her a parcel of land on the French Riviera at Roquebrune-Cap-Martin where Chanel built her villa, La Pausa.[16]
Westminster's extravagance and orchestrated technique in the courting of women led to various apocryphal stories. He purportedly concealed a huge uncut emerald at the bottom of a crate of vegetables delivered to Chanel. Disguised as a deliveryman, Westminster appeared at Chanel's apartment with an enormous bouquet of flowers. His ruse was only uncovered after Chanel's assistant offered "the delivery boy" a tip.
The Duke was described as "a pure Victorian who had eyes for his shotgun, his hunters, his dogs … a man who enjoyed hiding diamonds under the pillow of his mistresses …"[17] He was known for being very conservative and later, right wing.
The Duke was notable for being virulently opposed to homosexuality.[18] In 1931, the Duke exposed his brother-in-law William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp (1872–1938) as a homosexual to the King and Queen. He reportedly hoped to ruin the Liberal Party through Beauchamp. The king was horrified, supposedly saying, "I thought men like that shot themselves."[19] Following Beauchamp's departure for the continent after the Duke had assembled sufficient evidence to incriminate him, forcing the Earl to resign his public offices, the Duke sent him a note which read, "Dear Bugger-in-law, you got what you deserved. Yours, Westminster."[20]
During the run-up to the Second World War, he supported various right-wing and anti-Semitic causes, including the Right Club. His anti-Semitic rants were noted to be rather notorious.[21]
In the summer of 1939, Westminster joined The Link as a member of its national council. The British historian Ian Kershaw wrote that Westminster "had a propensity to share some of the Nazis' delusions about Jews and Freemasons", which led him to join The Link. During the Danzig crisis, Westminster was said to have been especially concerned about the prospect of the German strategical bombing of London because he owned so much of central London. Along with Lord Mount Temple, Lord Brocket, the Duke of Buccleuch, Lord Mottistone, Lord Arnold, Lord Sempill and Lord Tavistock, the duke of Westminster lobbied the Chamberlain government to settle the Danzig crisis peacefully, preferably by Britain abandoning the commitment to defend Poland. The British historian Richard Griffiths described Westminster as "strongly pro and anti-Semitic". Griffiths described him as a member of a "hard core" pro-Nazi faction in the House of Lords, who continued to defend Nazi Germany in the summer of 1939, even as the Danzig crisis pushed Britain closer to war. The main theme of the speeches of Westminster along with other pro-Nazi peers such as Lord Redesdale, Lord Brocket, Lord Buccleuch, Lord Mottistone, and Lord Sempill, was that Britain had no business being involved in the Danzig crisis and should withdraw from the crisis to allow Germany to settle its dispute with Poland in whatever manner it wished to do. By contrast to the unelected House of Lords, there were few MPs in the House of Commons who defended the Germany in the summer of 1939, owing to increasing unpopularity of Nazi Germany as even pro-German MPs realised expressing such views might cost them their seats in the next general election. Griffiths described the pro-Nazi MPs during the Danzig crisis such as Archibald Ramsay and C.T Culverwell as "eccentrics".
In her book The Light of Common Day, Lady Diana Cooper reminisced back to 1 September 1939. She and her husband, the prominent Conservative Duff Cooper, were lunching at London's Savoy Grill with the Duke of Westminster. She recalled:[22]
When he [the Duke of Westminster] added that Hitler knew after all that we were his best friends, he set off the powder-magazine. "I hope," Duff spat, "that by tomorrow he will know that we are his most implacable and remorseless enemies". Next day "Bendor", telephoning to a friend, said that if there was a war it would be entirely due to the Jews and Duff Cooper.In September 1939, after Britain declared war on the Nazi Germany on 3 September 1939 following the German invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939, Westminster hosted two meetings at his house of various pro-Nazi peers and MPs to discuss a way to make a negotiated peace with Germany. The Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax, heard reports that the meetings at Westminster's house were "of a very defeatist character".
The Duke, known for his pro-German sympathies, was reportedly instrumental in influencing his former mistress, Coco Chanel, to use her association with Winston Churchill to attempt to broker a bilateral peace agreement between Britain and Germany.[23] In late 1943 or early 1944, Chanel and her lover, German spy Hans Günther von Dincklage, undertook such an assignment. Codenamed "Operation Modellhut", it was an attempt involving the British embassy in Madrid and Chanel to influence Churchill, and thereby persuade the British government to negotiate a separate peace with Germany. This mission as planned ultimately met with failure, as Churchill had no interest.[24]
The Duke married four times and was divorced three times.
Apart from his four marriages, the Duke had multiple love affairs and was known to make lavish, spectacular presents to his lover of the moment. After his dalliance with Coco Chanel, he was fascinated by the Brazilian Aimée de Heeren, who was not interested in marrying him, but to whom he gave significant jewellery, once part of the French Crown Jewels.
The Duke died of coronary thrombosis at Loch More Lodge on his Scottish estate in Sutherland in July 1953, aged 74, and was buried in the churchyard of Eccleston Church near Eaton Hall, Cheshire.[8]
His large estate attracted then-record death duties of £18m, which took between July 1953 and August 1964 to pay off to the Inland Revenue.[27]
He left two daughters. His titles and the entailed Westminster estate passed to his cousin, William Grosvenor, and thence to the two sons of his youngest half-uncle Lord Hugh Grosvenor (killed in action in 1914). The title is now held by Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster.[28]