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Elizabeth Fox, Baroness Holland

Elizabeth Vassall Fox, Baroness Holland (1771 – London, November 1845) was an English political hostess and the wife of Whig politician Henry Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland. With her husband, and after his death, she hosted political and literary gatherings at their home, Holland House.

Elizabeth Webster, by Louis Gauffier (1794)

Biography edit

 
Elizabeth Vassall Fox, Lady Holland; Henry Richard Vassall Fox, 3rd Baron Holland; Mrs Brown, portrait by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer

Elizabeth Vassall was born in 1771 in London, the only child and heiress of Richard Vassall, a planter in Jamaica, and Mary Clarke of New York. She was the granddaughter of Florentius Vassall, a wealthy planter and slave-owner, in Jamaica whose last will was dated 1777.[1][2] She was also the first cousin of New York poet, scholar and real estate developer Clement Clarke Moore and second cousin of Theodosia Burr Alston, daughter of Aaron Burr.[3]

First marriage edit

Vassall married Sir Godfrey Webster, 4th Baronet in 1786. He was more than 20 years older than she was.[2] They had five children:[4]

Webster was intensely unhappy in her marriage and she spent much of the early 1790s travelling in Europe, visiting France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy.[2] She enjoyed the guidance and friendship of the Duchess of Devonshire and the politician Thomas Pelham, with whom she had an affair resulting in a daughter, Harriet Frances (b.1794).[1][2][5]

Second marriage edit

In 1794, Webster met in Naples the Whig politician Henry Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, two years her junior, and they embarked on a love affair.[2] They had seven children:[4]

  • General Charles Richard Fox (6 November 1796 – 13 April 1873). Born before the marriage of his parents.
  • The Hon. Stephen Fox (18 January 1799 – 22 November 1800).
  • A son (born and died 17 March 1801).
  • Henry Edward Fox, 4th Baron Holland (7 May 1802 – 18 December 1859).
  • The Hon. Mary Elizabeth Fox (19 February 1806 – 7 December 1891),[6] married on 24 May 1830 Thomas Powys, 3rd Baron Lilford.
  • The Hon. Georgiana Anne Fox (7 November 1809 – 31 October 1819).
  • A daughter (born and died 24 June 1812).[2]

On 4 July 1797, Fox was divorced by Webster on the grounds of adultery.[1] She married Holland two days later, on 6 July.[1] They lived together in Holland House in Kensington, then just outside London, and for many years hosted the elite of Whig society. Visitors included Lord Grey, George Tierney, Samuel Rogers, Walter Scott, Ugo Foscolo, Sydney Smith, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan.[7]

Holland became known by her guests and contemporary observers for her domineering nature, in contrast to her husband.[8] In his journals, Sydney Smith, a friend of both Lord and Lady Holland, called her a "formidable woman".[9] Actress Fanny Kemble visited Holland House with her sister Adelaide Kemble and described what she called the "domineering rudeness" of Lady Holland.[10] Lady Holland's rule extended not only to all of the guests at Holland House but to Lord Holland too. She dictated when he should go to bed, what he should wear, and would have servants take him away from the table in his wheelchair when he was in the middle of telling a story.[11][12]

Both Lord and Lady Holland were great admirers of Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1815, Holland commissioned a bronze bust of him from the sculptor Antonio Canova, which was placed in the garden at Holland House.[2][13] After Napoleon was exiled to Saint Helena in 1815, Lady Holland sent him supplies of food and hundreds of books.[14] Napoleon remembered Lady Holland in his will and following his death, in 1821, his companions General Henri Gratien Bertrand and the Marquis de Montholon arrived at Holland House, delivering a snuffbox.[14] The gold snuffbox, which had been a gift to Napoleon from Pope Pius VI, was later bequeathed by Lady Holland to the British Museum.[2]

Lord Holland died on 22 October 1840. After his death, Lady Holland lived at 33 South Street, a property she had inherited from her mother.[2] She continued to entertain, and it was here that the historian John Allen died in 1843.[15] In November of that year, Holland moved to 9 Great Stanhope Street, a property she rented from Lord Palmerston.[2]

Lady Holland died in 1845. By the end of her life, she had become estranged from her children. She supposedly said to Lord John Russell, 'I hate my son, I don't like my daughter'.[5] In his Memoirs, diarist Charles Greville called Lady Holland "a social light which illuminated and adorned England, and even Europe, for half a century".[16]

Introduction of the dahlia edit

Lady Holland became known for permanently introducing the dahlia to the United Kingdom. An unsuccessful attempt had been made in 1789 by the Marchioness of Bute who brought the plant from Spain but failed to propagate it.[17] Whilst in Madrid in 1804, Lady Holland was given either dahlia seeds or roots by the botanist Antonio José Cavanilles.[18][19] She sent them back to England, to Lord Holland's librarian Mr Buonaiuti at Holland House, who successfully raised the plants.[20] In 1824, Lord Holland sent his wife a note containing the following verse:

"The dahlia you brought to our isle

Your praises for ever shall speak;
Mid gardens as sweet as your smile,

And in colour as bright as your cheek."[21]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Hartley, Cathy, ed. (2003) [1983]. A Historical Dictionary of British Women. London: Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 173–174. ISBN 1-85743-228-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wright, C. J. "Fox, Elizabeth Vassall, Lady Holland". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/10028. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Stillwell, John E. (John Edwin) (1931). The History of Captain Richard Stillwell, Son of Lieutenant Nicholas Stillwell, and His Descendants. New York: self-published. pp. 48–49, 99–101.
  4. ^ a b The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Vol. 17: The Vassalls of New England. New England Historic Genealogical Society. 1863. p. 126.
  5. ^ a b Dolan, Brian (2003). Ladies of the Grand Tour. Flamingo.
  6. ^ "Biography of 3rd Baron Lilford". The Lilford Estate, Northamptonshire, England. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  7. ^ McCalman, Iain (2001). An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age: British Culture, 1776–1832. Oxford University Press. p. 546. ISBN 0-19-924543-6.
  8. ^ Bevington, Helen Smith (1996). The Third and Only Way: Reflections on Staying Alive. Duke University Press. p. 55. ISBN 0-8223-1850-4.
  9. ^ Smith, Sydney (1856). Wit and wisdom of the Rev. Sydney Smith. Redfield. p. 89.
  10. ^ Kemble, Frances Anne (2008). Records of Later Life. BiblioBazaar. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-554-98916-7.
  11. ^ Bradford, Gamaliel (2007). Portraits of Women. READ BOOKS. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-4067-4591-7.
  12. ^ Sanders, Lloyd (1972). Holland House Circle. Ayer Publishing. p. 61. ISBN 0-405-08915-5.
  13. ^ Malan, A. H. Famous Homes of Great Britain and Their Stories. Adamant Media Corporation. p. 164. ISBN 1-4212-6949-X.
  14. ^ a b Clubbe, John (2005). Byron, Sully, and the power of portraiture. Ashgate Publishing. p. 168. ISBN 0-7546-3814-6.
  15. ^ Lennox, Lady Sarah; Henry Fox Holland (1902). The life and letters of Lady Sarah Lennox. J. Murray.
  16. ^ McCabe, Joseph (1920). A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists. p. 263. ISBN 1-110-36603-5.
  17. ^ Heriot, James (1836). Journal of Agriculture. W. Blackwood. p. 72.
  18. ^ Forbes, James; John Russell Bedford (1833). Hortus woburnensis. J. Ridgway. p. 246.
  19. ^ Stout, Charles H. (2008). The Amateur's Book of the Dahlia. READ BOOKS. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-4097-7778-6.
  20. ^ Hogg, Robert (1853). The Dahlia; Its History and Cultivation. Groombidge and sons. p. 5.
  21. ^ Ward, Bobby J. (1999). A contemplation upon flowers. Timber Press. p. 119. ISBN 0-88192-469-5.


elizabeth, baroness, holland, elizabeth, vassall, baroness, holland, 1771, london, november, 1845, english, political, hostess, wife, whig, politician, henry, vassall, baron, holland, with, husband, after, death, hosted, political, literary, gatherings, their,. Elizabeth Vassall Fox Baroness Holland 1771 London November 1845 was an English political hostess and the wife of Whig politician Henry Vassall Fox 3rd Baron Holland With her husband and after his death she hosted political and literary gatherings at their home Holland House Elizabeth Webster by Louis Gauffier 1794 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 First marriage 1 2 Second marriage 2 Introduction of the dahlia 3 ReferencesBiography edit nbsp Elizabeth Vassall Fox Lady Holland Henry Richard Vassall Fox 3rd Baron Holland Mrs Brown portrait by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer Elizabeth Vassall was born in 1771 in London the only child and heiress of Richard Vassall a planter in Jamaica and Mary Clarke of New York She was the granddaughter of Florentius Vassall a wealthy planter and slave owner in Jamaica whose last will was dated 1777 1 2 She was also the first cousin of New York poet scholar and real estate developer Clement Clarke Moore and second cousin of Theodosia Burr Alston daughter of Aaron Burr 3 First marriage edit Vassall married Sir Godfrey Webster 4th Baronet in 1786 He was more than 20 years older than she was 2 They had five children 4 Sir Godfrey Vassall Webster 5th Baronet 6 October 1789 17 July 1836 A son born and died 1790 2 Lt Col Sir Henry Vassall Webster 1793 1847 Lady Harriet Frances Webster 1794 7 August 1849 married on 5 June 1816 Hon Adm Sir Fleetwood Broughton Reynolds Pellew A son born and died October 1795 2 Webster was intensely unhappy in her marriage and she spent much of the early 1790s travelling in Europe visiting France Germany Switzerland and Italy 2 She enjoyed the guidance and friendship of the Duchess of Devonshire and the politician Thomas Pelham with whom she had an affair resulting in a daughter Harriet Frances b 1794 1 2 5 Second marriage edit In 1794 Webster met in Naples the Whig politician Henry Fox 3rd Baron Holland two years her junior and they embarked on a love affair 2 They had seven children 4 General Charles Richard Fox 6 November 1796 13 April 1873 Born before the marriage of his parents The Hon Stephen Fox 18 January 1799 22 November 1800 A son born and died 17 March 1801 Henry Edward Fox 4th Baron Holland 7 May 1802 18 December 1859 The Hon Mary Elizabeth Fox 19 February 1806 7 December 1891 6 married on 24 May 1830 Thomas Powys 3rd Baron Lilford The Hon Georgiana Anne Fox 7 November 1809 31 October 1819 A daughter born and died 24 June 1812 2 On 4 July 1797 Fox was divorced by Webster on the grounds of adultery 1 She married Holland two days later on 6 July 1 They lived together in Holland House in Kensington then just outside London and for many years hosted the elite of Whig society Visitors included Lord Grey George Tierney Samuel Rogers Walter Scott Ugo Foscolo Sydney Smith and Richard Brinsley Sheridan 7 Holland became known by her guests and contemporary observers for her domineering nature in contrast to her husband 8 In his journals Sydney Smith a friend of both Lord and Lady Holland called her a formidable woman 9 Actress Fanny Kemble visited Holland House with her sister Adelaide Kemble and described what she called the domineering rudeness of Lady Holland 10 Lady Holland s rule extended not only to all of the guests at Holland House but to Lord Holland too She dictated when he should go to bed what he should wear and would have servants take him away from the table in his wheelchair when he was in the middle of telling a story 11 12 Both Lord and Lady Holland were great admirers of Napoleon Bonaparte In 1815 Holland commissioned a bronze bust of him from the sculptor Antonio Canova which was placed in the garden at Holland House 2 13 After Napoleon was exiled to Saint Helena in 1815 Lady Holland sent him supplies of food and hundreds of books 14 Napoleon remembered Lady Holland in his will and following his death in 1821 his companions General Henri Gratien Bertrand and the Marquis de Montholon arrived at Holland House delivering a snuffbox 14 The gold snuffbox which had been a gift to Napoleon from Pope Pius VI was later bequeathed by Lady Holland to the British Museum 2 Lord Holland died on 22 October 1840 After his death Lady Holland lived at 33 South Street a property she had inherited from her mother 2 She continued to entertain and it was here that the historian John Allen died in 1843 15 In November of that year Holland moved to 9 Great Stanhope Street a property she rented from Lord Palmerston 2 Lady Holland died in 1845 By the end of her life she had become estranged from her children She supposedly said to Lord John Russell I hate my son I don t like my daughter 5 In his Memoirs diarist Charles Greville called Lady Holland a social light which illuminated and adorned England and even Europe for half a century 16 Introduction of the dahlia editLady Holland became known for permanently introducing the dahlia to the United Kingdom An unsuccessful attempt had been made in 1789 by the Marchioness of Bute who brought the plant from Spain but failed to propagate it 17 Whilst in Madrid in 1804 Lady Holland was given either dahlia seeds or roots by the botanist Antonio Jose Cavanilles 18 19 She sent them back to England to Lord Holland s librarian Mr Buonaiuti at Holland House who successfully raised the plants 20 In 1824 Lord Holland sent his wife a note containing the following verse The dahlia you brought to our isleYour praises for ever shall speak Mid gardens as sweet as your smile And in colour as bright as your cheek 21 References edit a b c d Hartley Cathy ed 2003 1983 A Historical Dictionary of British Women London Taylor amp Francis Group pp 173 174 ISBN 1 85743 228 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l Wright C J Fox Elizabeth Vassall Lady Holland Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10028 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stillwell John E John Edwin 1931 The History of Captain Richard Stillwell Son of Lieutenant Nicholas Stillwell and His Descendants New York self published pp 48 49 99 101 a b The New England Historical and Genealogical Register Vol 17 The Vassalls of New England New England Historic Genealogical Society 1863 p 126 a b Dolan Brian 2003 Ladies of the Grand Tour Flamingo Biography of 3rd Baron Lilford The Lilford Estate Northamptonshire England Retrieved 6 December 2014 McCalman Iain 2001 An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age British Culture 1776 1832 Oxford University Press p 546 ISBN 0 19 924543 6 Bevington Helen Smith 1996 The Third and Only Way Reflections on Staying Alive Duke University Press p 55 ISBN 0 8223 1850 4 Smith Sydney 1856 Wit and wisdom of the Rev Sydney Smith Redfield p 89 Kemble Frances Anne 2008 Records of Later Life BiblioBazaar p 98 ISBN 978 0 554 98916 7 Bradford Gamaliel 2007 Portraits of Women READ BOOKS p 32 ISBN 978 1 4067 4591 7 Sanders Lloyd 1972 Holland House Circle Ayer Publishing p 61 ISBN 0 405 08915 5 Malan A H Famous Homes of Great Britain and Their Stories Adamant Media Corporation p 164 ISBN 1 4212 6949 X a b Clubbe John 2005 Byron Sully and the power of portraiture Ashgate Publishing p 168 ISBN 0 7546 3814 6 Lennox Lady Sarah Henry Fox Holland 1902 The life and letters of Lady Sarah Lennox J Murray McCabe Joseph 1920 A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists p 263 ISBN 1 110 36603 5 Heriot James 1836 Journal of Agriculture W Blackwood p 72 Forbes James John Russell Bedford 1833 Hortus woburnensis J Ridgway p 246 Stout Charles H 2008 The Amateur s Book of the Dahlia READ BOOKS p 6 ISBN 978 1 4097 7778 6 Hogg Robert 1853 The Dahlia Its History and Cultivation Groombidge and sons p 5 Ward Bobby J 1999 A contemplation upon flowers Timber Press p 119 ISBN 0 88192 469 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth Fox Baroness Holland amp oldid 1216766541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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