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Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon

Henry Howard Molyneux Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon, KP, PC, DL, FRS, FSA (24 June 1831 – 29 June 1890), known as Lord Porchester from 1833 to 1849, was a British politician and a leading member of the Conservative Party. He was twice Secretary of State for the Colonies and also served as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.

The Earl of Carnarvon
Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire
In office
6 August 1887 – 29 June 1890
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byThe Marquess of Winchester
Succeeded byThe Earl of Northbrook
Secretary of State for the Colonies
In office
6 July 1866 – 8 March 1867
MonarchQueen Victoria
Prime MinisterThe Earl of Derby
Preceded byEdward Cardwell
Succeeded byThe Duke of Buckingham and Chandos
In office
21 February 1874 – 4 February 1878
MonarchQueen Victoria
Prime MinisterBenjamin Disraeli
Preceded byThe Earl of Kimberley
Succeeded bySir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
In office
27 June 1885 – 28 January 1886
MonarchQueen Victoria
Prime MinisterThe Marquess of Salisbury
Preceded byThe Earl Spencer
Succeeded byThe Earl of Aberdeen
Personal details
Born(1831-06-24)24 June 1831
Grosvenor Square, London
Died29 June 1890(1890-06-29) (aged 59)
Portman Square, London
NationalityEnglish
Political partyConservative
Spouses
Lady Evelyn Stanhope
(m. 1861; died 1875)
Elizabeth Howard
(m. 1878)
Children
Parent(s)Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon
Henrietta Anna Howard
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford

Origins

Born at Grosvenor Square, London, Carnarvon was the eldest son and heir of Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon (d.1849), by his wife Henrietta Anna Howard, a daughter of Lord Henry Howard-Molyneux-Howard, younger brother of Bernard Howard, 12th Duke of Norfolk. The Hon. Auberon Herbert was his younger brother.

Youth

He was educated at Eton College. In 1849, aged 18, he succeeded his father in the earldom. He attended Christ Church, Oxford, where his nickname was "Twitters",[1] apparently on account of his nervous tics and twitchy behaviour, and where in 1852 he obtained a first in literae humaniores.

Early political career, 1854–66

Carnavon made his maiden speech in the House of Lords on 31 January 1854, having been requested by Lord Aberdeen to move the address in reply to the Queen's Speech. He served under Lord Derby, as Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1858 to 1859, aged twenty-six.

In 1863 he worked on penal reform. Under the influence of Joshua Jebb he saw the gaols,[a] with a population including prisoners before any trial, as numerically more significant than the system of prisons for convicts. He was himself a magistrate, and campaigned for the conditions of confinement to be made less comfortable, with more severe regimes on labour and diet. He also wished to see a national system that was more uniform. In response, he was asked to run a House of Lords committee, which sat from February 1863. It drafted a report, and a Gaol Bill was brought in, during 1864; it was, however, lost amid opposition. The Prisons Act 1866, passed by parliament during 1865, saw Carnarvon's main ideas implemented, though with detailed amendments.[2]

Colonial Secretary and Canadian federation, 1866–7

In 1866 Carnarvon was sworn of the Privy Council and appointed Secretary of State for the Colonies by Derby. In 1867 he introduced the British North America Act, which conferred self-government on Canada, and created a federation. Later that year, he resigned (along with Lord Cranborne and Jonathan Peel) in protest against Benjamin Disraeli's Reform Bill to enfranchise the working classes.

Colonial Secretary, 1874–8

Returning to the office of the British colonial secretary in 1874, he submitted a set of proposals, the Carnarvon terms, to settle the dispute between British Columbia and Canada over the construction of the transcontinental railroad and the Vancouver Island railroad and train bridge. Vancouver Island had been promised a rail link as a condition for its entry into Canadian Confederation.

South Africa

In the same year, he set in motion plans to impose a system of confederation on the various states of Southern Africa. The situation in southern Africa was complicated, not least in that several of its states were still independent and so required military conquest before being confederated. The confederation plan was also highly unpopular among ordinary southern Africans. The Prime Minister of the Cape Colony (by far the largest and most influential state in southern Africa) firmly rejected confederation under Britain, saying that it was not a model that was applicable to the diverse region, and that conflict would result from outside involvement in southern Africa at a time when state relations were particularly sensitive.[3] The liberal Cape government also objected to the plan for ideological concerns; Its formal response, conveyed to London via Sir Henry Barkly, had been that any federation with the illiberal Boer republics would compromise the rights and franchise of the Cape's Black citizens, and was therefore unacceptable.[4] Other regional governments refused even to discuss the idea.[5] Overall, the opinion of the governments of the Cape and its neighbours was that "the proposals for confederation should emanate from the communities to be affected, and not be pressed upon them from outside."[6]

According to historian Martin Meredith, Lord Carnarvon was primarily concerned with "imperial defence", and "regarded the Cape and its naval facilities at Simon's Bay as being the most important link in the imperial network".[7] He thus decided to force the pace, "endeavouring to give South Africa not what it wanted, but what he considered it ought to want."[8] He sent colonial administrators such as Theophilus Shepstone and Henry Bartle Frere to southern Africa to implement his system of confederation. Shepstone occupied and annexed the Transvaal in 1877, while Bartle Frere, as the new High Commissioner, led imperial troops against the last group of independent Xhosa in the Ninth Frontier War. Carnarvon then used the rising unrest to suspend the Natal constitution, while Bartle Frere overthrew the elected Cape government, and then moved to invade the independent Zulu Kingdom.

However the confederation scheme collapsed as predicted, leaving a trail of wars across Southern Africa. Humiliating defeats also followed at Isandlwana and Majuba Hill. Of the resultant wars, the initially disastrous invasion of Zululand ultimately ended in success, but the First Boer War of 1880 had even more far-reaching consequences for the subcontinent. Francis Reginald Statham, editor of The Natal Witness in the 1870s, famously summed up the local reaction to Carnarvon's plan for the region:

He (Carnarvon) thought it no harm to adopt this machinery (Canadian Confederation System) just as it stood, even down to the numbering and arrangement of the sections and sub-sections, and present it to the astonished South Africans as a god to go before them. It was as if your tailor should say – "Here is a coat; I did not make it, but I stole it ready-made out of a railway cloak-room, I don't know whether you want a coat or not; but you will be kind enough to put this on, and fit yourself to it. If it should happen to be too long in the sleeves, or ridiculously short in the back, I may be able to shift a button a few inches, and I am at least unalterably determined that my name shall be stamped on the loop you hang it up by.[9]

The confederation idea was dropped when Carnarvon resigned in 1878, in opposition to Disraeli's policy on the Eastern Question, but the bitter conflicts caused by Carnarvon's policy continued, culminating eventually in the Second Boer War and the annexation of the two Boer republics.[10]

Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, 1885–6

On his party's return to power in 1885, Carnarvon became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. His short period of office, memorable only for a conflict on a question of personal veracity between himself and Charles Stewart Parnell, as to his negotiations with the latter in respect of Home Rule, was terminated by another premature resignation. He never returned to office.

 
Herbert sketched in 1869 by "Ape" for Vanity Fair

Other public appointments

Carnarvon also held the honorary posts of Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire between 1887 and 1890 and Deputy Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire. He was regarded as a highly cultured man and was a president and a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries (his time there noted for their campaign to save St Albans Cathedral from Lord Grimthorpe) and a Fellow of the Royal Society as well as was high steward of Oxford University. He was also a prominent freemason, having been initiated in the Westminster and Keystone Lodge. He served as Pro Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of England from 1874 to 1890. With his permission a number of subsequently founded lodges bore his name in their titles.

Some buildings commissioned by, associated with or overseen by Lord Carnarvon

 
Concrete Cottages, Old Burghclere, before 1871.[b] Rare and pioneering concrete dwelling built for the magnificent 4th Earl of Carnarvon. Originally tripartite, they show both agricultural and urban Neo-Palladian traits.
 
Villa Altachiara or Villa Carnarvon, Portofino, Liguria, Italy, from a postcard made before 1900. Prince Frederick William of Prussia stayed there near the end of his life.

Carnarvon became a Freemason in 1856, joining the Westminster and Keystone Lodge, No. 10. In 1860 he was made the second Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons (created in 1856) and in 1870 he was appointed Deputy Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) by Lord Ripon, and was Pro Grand Master from 1874 to 1890. Furthermore, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1875, confirming, in addition to his work as a statesman, his interest in innovation, geometry, the Enlightenment, science, the Scientific Revolution and the world.

  • 1855–1878: The Highclere mausoleum or chapel was built for Henrietta Anna, Countess of Carnarvon, in memory of his father and her husband, Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon. Between 1839 and 1842, his father the third earl had employed Sir Charles Barry to turn the Georgian Highclere house into a Jacobethan castle. The interiors and west wing were carried out by Sir Charles Barry's assistant Thomas Allom who also provided the design of the funerary chapel-mausoleum. The entrance hallway-vestibule inside was designed by Sir Gilbert Scott. The work on the house was complete by 1878.
  • 1869–1870: Church of St Michael and All Angels, Highclere, by Sir Gilbert Scott.
  • 1870: Concrete Cottages, Long Piddle, Burghclere Bottom, Scouses Corner, Kingsclere or Sydmonton road, Old Burghclere. Rare and early concrete or mass concrete estate housing. The apparatus employed in the construction could have been that patented and manufactured by Messrs. Drake, Brothers, & Reid, of London, in 1868. Designed possibly by Thomas Robjohn Wonnacott or Charles Barry, Jr.[11][c] (Around the same time, neighbouring landowner Lord Ashburton[d] and his clerk of works Thomas Potter, who wrote Concrete: its use in building and the construction of concrete walls, floors, etc., 1877,[12][e] built at least one pair of concrete cottages in the Wiltshire villages of All Cannings and Steeple Langford.) Carnarvon had long been thinking about labourers' cottages and accompanying allotments.[f] The Reading Mercury reported the Burghclere project on Saturday, 30 October 1869:

    "BURGHCLERE – Considerable amount of interest has been excited in this locality on the subject of Cheap Dwellings for the Working Classes, owing to a report that the Earl of Carnarvon was about to start the new system of building houses in concrete. His Lordship has already commenced the erection of a block of three cottages at Burghclere Bottom, and no doubt the result will be anticipated with much interest both by landed proprietors and tenant farmers. This plan, if successful, will settle much controversy as to the predictability of building suitable farm cottages at a cheap rate, as up to this time cottages in brickwork do not afford interest on the capital expended. The work is to be done with Tall's Patent Concrete Machine, and is not expected to cost more than 6L. [£6] per rod standard thickness [a rod is 5 meters, or 5.5 yard, 16.5 feet]. Many buildings of various descriptions have already been erected on this principle throughout the country, and competent judges have pronounced them the exact kind of building that is wanted. They are said to have a neat appearance when completed, and are not only stronger and more durable than brickwork, but warmer and consequently more dry and healthy." Reading Mercury, Saturday, 30 October 1869.

  • 1874–1881: Villa Altachiara ("Highclere" in Italian) (Villa Carnarvon) near Portofino, Liguria. A massive villa overlooking Portofino. It was still owned by the Herberts when Evelyn Waugh visited in 1936.[g]

Marriages and issue

Lord Carnarvon married twice. His first marriage was in 1861 to Lady Evelyn Stanhope (1834–1875), daughter of George Stanhope, 6th Earl of Chesterfield, and Hon. Anne Elizabeth Weld-Forester, by whom he had one son and three daughters:

Following his first wife's death in 1875, Lord Carnarvon married his first cousin Elizabeth Catherine Howard (1857–1929) in 1878. She was a daughter of Henry Howard of Greystoke Castle, near Penrith, Cumberland (brother of Henrietta Anna Molyneux-Howard (1804–1876), wife of Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon), a son of Lord Henry Howard-Molyneux-Howard and younger brother of Bernard Howard, 12th Duke of Norfolk. Elizabeth Howard's brother was Esmé Howard, 1st Baron Howard of Penrith. By his second wife he had two further sons:

Death and burial

Lord Carnarvon died in June 1890, aged 59, at Portman Square in London. His second wife survived him by almost forty years and died in February 1929, aged 72.

Notes

  1. ^ "Gaol" is an older British English version of the American English "jail", more usually found in official documents and names of prisons in the United Kingdom, and Ireland. For example, Kilmainham Gaol, Reading Gaol, etc..
  2. ^ Long Piddle, Burghclere Bottom, Scouses Corner, on the north side of the Kingsclere and Sydmonton road, Old Burghclere.
  3. ^ The Drake Patent Concrete Building Company was founded in 1868.
  4. ^ A cousin of Carnarvon's successor as Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire, Thomas Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook.
  5. ^ Potter's home at 22 Havelock Road, Croydon is still there
  6. ^ His late September 1866 address to the Highclere Agricultural Association at Burghclere on the subject of Labourers' Cottages in Ireland was reported in at least the Dublin Evening Mail and the Glasgow Herald.
  7. ^ Prince Frederick William of Prussia and Victoria, Princess Royal stayed there circa 1886. Elizabeth Chapin Patterson, daughter of Simeon B. Chapin, rented it for Avatar Meher Baba in July 1933. It is also associated with Norina Matchabelli, and Contessa Francesca Vacca Agusta, who died there. It is now owned by the footballer Samuel Eto.

References

  1. ^ Charmley 2013.
  2. ^ McConville 1995, p. 97, Ch. 3.
  3. ^ Reader's Digest Association South Africa 1992, p. 182.
  4. ^ Mostert 1992, p. 1247.
  5. ^ Cana 1909, p. 89, Ch. VII.
  6. ^ Theal 1902, p. 402-3.
  7. ^ Meredith 2007, p. 63.
  8. ^ Michell 1910, p. 109.
  9. ^ Statham 1881, p. 239.
  10. ^ Parker 2013, p. 37, "Lord Carnarvon".
  11. ^ Collins 1959.
  12. ^ Potter 1908.
  13. ^ "Obituary : Bridget Grant". The Telegraph. 23 July 2005. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  14. ^ Monument to Lord Carnarvon (Memorial). Brushford Church, Somerset.
  15. ^ Ref:DD\DRU: "HERBERT FAMILY OF PIXTON PARK, Dulverton, Somerset Heritage Centre, The Teversal estate in Nottinghamshire, formerly belonging to the Molyneux family, was brought into the Herbert family by Henrietta Howard, daughter of Lord Henry Howard-Molyneux-Howard of Greystoke, who married Henry Herbert, Lord Porchester, later 3rd Earl of Carnarvon, in 1830
  16. ^ Mellors 1924, p. 265.
  • Cana, Frank Richardson (1909). South Africa: From the Great Trek to the Union. Chapman & Hall, Limited.
  • Charmley, John (2013). Splendid Isolation?: Britain, the Balance of Power and the Origins of the First World War. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-30925-2.
  • Collins, Peter (1959). Concrete: the vision of a new architecture: a study of Auguste Perret and his precursors. Horizon Press.
  • McConville, Seán (1995). "Chapter 3: Carnarvon and National Penal Policy". English Local Prisons, 1860-1900: Next Only to Death. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-03295-7.
  • Mellors, Robert (1924). Men of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire: Being Biographical Notices of Five Hundred Men and Women who Were Born, Or Worked, Or Abode, Or Died in the County of City of Nottingham. Bell.
  • Meredith, Martin (2007). Diamonds, Gold and War: The Making of South Africa. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-8614-5.
  • Michell, Sir Lewis (1910). The Life and Times of the Right Honourable Cecil John Rhodes 1853-1902. Vol. 1. New York: M. Kennerley.
  • Mostert, Noël (1992). Frontiers: the epic of South Africa's creation and the tragedy of the Xhosa people. Knopf.
  • Parker, Alexander (2013). 50 People Who Stuffed Up South Africa. Jacana. ISBN 978-0-9870437-2-6.
  • Potter, Thomas (1908). Concrete: its use in building and the construction of walls, floors, etc.
  • Reader's Digest Association South Africa (1992). "Confederation from the Barrel of a Gun". Illustrated history of South Africa: the real story. Reader's Digest Association South Africa. ISBN 978-0-947008-90-1.
  • Statham, Francis Reginald (1881). Blacks, Boers, & British: A Three-cornered Problem. Macmillan and Company. p. 239.
  • Theal, George McCall (1902). Progress of South Africa in the Century. Toronto: Linscott.

Further reading

External links

  • Works by or about Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon at Internet Archive
  • Edited compilation of the Duffering-Carnarvon Correspondences, 1874-1878, provided by the Champlain Society.

henry, herbert, earl, carnarvon, henry, howard, molyneux, herbert, earl, carnarvon, june, 1831, june, 1890, known, lord, porchester, from, 1833, 1849, british, politician, leading, member, conservative, party, twice, secretary, state, colonies, also, served, l. Henry Howard Molyneux Herbert 4th Earl of Carnarvon KP PC DL FRS FSA 24 June 1831 29 June 1890 known as Lord Porchester from 1833 to 1849 was a British politician and a leading member of the Conservative Party He was twice Secretary of State for the Colonies and also served as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland The Right HonourableThe Earl of CarnarvonKP PC DL FRS FSALord Lieutenant of HampshireIn office 6 August 1887 29 June 1890MonarchVictoriaPreceded byThe Marquess of WinchesterSucceeded byThe Earl of NorthbrookSecretary of State for the ColoniesIn office 6 July 1866 8 March 1867MonarchQueen VictoriaPrime MinisterThe Earl of DerbyPreceded byEdward CardwellSucceeded byThe Duke of Buckingham and ChandosIn office 21 February 1874 4 February 1878MonarchQueen VictoriaPrime MinisterBenjamin DisraeliPreceded byThe Earl of KimberleySucceeded bySir Michael Hicks Beach BtLord Lieutenant of IrelandIn office 27 June 1885 28 January 1886MonarchQueen VictoriaPrime MinisterThe Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byThe Earl SpencerSucceeded byThe Earl of AberdeenPersonal detailsBorn 1831 06 24 24 June 1831Grosvenor Square LondonDied29 June 1890 1890 06 29 aged 59 Portman Square LondonNationalityEnglishPolitical partyConservativeSpousesLady Evelyn Stanhope m 1861 died 1875 wbr Elizabeth Howard m 1878 wbr ChildrenGeorge Herbert 5th Earl of Carnarvon Winifred Gardner Baroness Burghclere Lady Margaret Duckworth Lady Victoria Herbert Hon Aubrey Herbert Hon Mervyn HerbertParent s Henry Herbert 3rd Earl of Carnarvon Henrietta Anna HowardAlma materChrist Church Oxford Contents 1 Origins 2 Youth 3 Early political career 1854 66 4 Colonial Secretary and Canadian federation 1866 7 5 Colonial Secretary 1874 8 5 1 South Africa 6 Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 1885 6 7 Other public appointments 8 Some buildings commissioned by associated with or overseen by Lord Carnarvon 9 Marriages and issue 10 Death and burial 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksOrigins EditBorn at Grosvenor Square London Carnarvon was the eldest son and heir of Henry Herbert 3rd Earl of Carnarvon d 1849 by his wife Henrietta Anna Howard a daughter of Lord Henry Howard Molyneux Howard younger brother of Bernard Howard 12th Duke of Norfolk The Hon Auberon Herbert was his younger brother Youth EditHe was educated at Eton College In 1849 aged 18 he succeeded his father in the earldom He attended Christ Church Oxford where his nickname was Twitters 1 apparently on account of his nervous tics and twitchy behaviour and where in 1852 he obtained a first in literae humaniores Early political career 1854 66 EditCarnavon made his maiden speech in the House of Lords on 31 January 1854 having been requested by Lord Aberdeen to move the address in reply to the Queen s Speech He served under Lord Derby as Under Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1858 to 1859 aged twenty six In 1863 he worked on penal reform Under the influence of Joshua Jebb he saw the gaols a with a population including prisoners before any trial as numerically more significant than the system of prisons for convicts He was himself a magistrate and campaigned for the conditions of confinement to be made less comfortable with more severe regimes on labour and diet He also wished to see a national system that was more uniform In response he was asked to run a House of Lords committee which sat from February 1863 It drafted a report and a Gaol Bill was brought in during 1864 it was however lost amid opposition The Prisons Act 1866 passed by parliament during 1865 saw Carnarvon s main ideas implemented though with detailed amendments 2 Colonial Secretary and Canadian federation 1866 7 EditIn 1866 Carnarvon was sworn of the Privy Council and appointed Secretary of State for the Colonies by Derby In 1867 he introduced the British North America Act which conferred self government on Canada and created a federation Later that year he resigned along with Lord Cranborne and Jonathan Peel in protest against Benjamin Disraeli s Reform Bill to enfranchise the working classes Colonial Secretary 1874 8 EditReturning to the office of the British colonial secretary in 1874 he submitted a set of proposals the Carnarvon terms to settle the dispute between British Columbia and Canada over the construction of the transcontinental railroad and the Vancouver Island railroad and train bridge Vancouver Island had been promised a rail link as a condition for its entry into Canadian Confederation South Africa Edit In the same year he set in motion plans to impose a system of confederation on the various states of Southern Africa The situation in southern Africa was complicated not least in that several of its states were still independent and so required military conquest before being confederated The confederation plan was also highly unpopular among ordinary southern Africans The Prime Minister of the Cape Colony by far the largest and most influential state in southern Africa firmly rejected confederation under Britain saying that it was not a model that was applicable to the diverse region and that conflict would result from outside involvement in southern Africa at a time when state relations were particularly sensitive 3 The liberal Cape government also objected to the plan for ideological concerns Its formal response conveyed to London via Sir Henry Barkly had been that any federation with the illiberal Boer republics would compromise the rights and franchise of the Cape s Black citizens and was therefore unacceptable 4 Other regional governments refused even to discuss the idea 5 Overall the opinion of the governments of the Cape and its neighbours was that the proposals for confederation should emanate from the communities to be affected and not be pressed upon them from outside 6 According to historian Martin Meredith Lord Carnarvon was primarily concerned with imperial defence and regarded the Cape and its naval facilities at Simon s Bay as being the most important link in the imperial network 7 He thus decided to force the pace endeavouring to give South Africa not what it wanted but what he considered it ought to want 8 He sent colonial administrators such as Theophilus Shepstone and Henry Bartle Frere to southern Africa to implement his system of confederation Shepstone occupied and annexed the Transvaal in 1877 while Bartle Frere as the new High Commissioner led imperial troops against the last group of independent Xhosa in the Ninth Frontier War Carnarvon then used the rising unrest to suspend the Natal constitution while Bartle Frere overthrew the elected Cape government and then moved to invade the independent Zulu Kingdom However the confederation scheme collapsed as predicted leaving a trail of wars across Southern Africa Humiliating defeats also followed at Isandlwana and Majuba Hill Of the resultant wars the initially disastrous invasion of Zululand ultimately ended in success but the First Boer War of 1880 had even more far reaching consequences for the subcontinent Francis Reginald Statham editor of The Natal Witness in the 1870s famously summed up the local reaction to Carnarvon s plan for the region He Carnarvon thought it no harm to adopt this machinery Canadian Confederation System just as it stood even down to the numbering and arrangement of the sections and sub sections and present it to the astonished South Africans as a god to go before them It was as if your tailor should say Here is a coat I did not make it but I stole it ready made out of a railway cloak room I don t know whether you want a coat or not but you will be kind enough to put this on and fit yourself to it If it should happen to be too long in the sleeves or ridiculously short in the back I may be able to shift a button a few inches and I am at least unalterably determined that my name shall be stamped on the loop you hang it up by 9 The confederation idea was dropped when Carnarvon resigned in 1878 in opposition to Disraeli s policy on the Eastern Question but the bitter conflicts caused by Carnarvon s policy continued culminating eventually in the Second Boer War and the annexation of the two Boer republics 10 Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 1885 6 EditOn his party s return to power in 1885 Carnarvon became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland His short period of office memorable only for a conflict on a question of personal veracity between himself and Charles Stewart Parnell as to his negotiations with the latter in respect of Home Rule was terminated by another premature resignation He never returned to office Herbert sketched in 1869 by Ape for Vanity FairOther public appointments EditCarnarvon also held the honorary posts of Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire between 1887 and 1890 and Deputy Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire He was regarded as a highly cultured man and was a president and a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries his time there noted for their campaign to save St Albans Cathedral from Lord Grimthorpe and a Fellow of the Royal Society as well as was high steward of Oxford University He was also a prominent freemason having been initiated in the Westminster and Keystone Lodge He served as Pro Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of England from 1874 to 1890 With his permission a number of subsequently founded lodges bore his name in their titles Some buildings commissioned by associated with or overseen by Lord Carnarvon Edit Concrete Cottages Old Burghclere before 1871 b Rare and pioneering concrete dwelling built for the magnificent 4th Earl of Carnarvon Originally tripartite they show both agricultural and urban Neo Palladian traits Villa Altachiara or Villa Carnarvon Portofino Liguria Italy from a postcard made before 1900 Prince Frederick William of Prussia stayed there near the end of his life Carnarvon became a Freemason in 1856 joining the Westminster and Keystone Lodge No 10 In 1860 he was made the second Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons created in 1856 and in 1870 he was appointed Deputy Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England UGLE by Lord Ripon and was Pro Grand Master from 1874 to 1890 Furthermore he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1875 confirming in addition to his work as a statesman his interest in innovation geometry the Enlightenment science the Scientific Revolution and the world 1855 1878 The Highclere mausoleum or chapel was built for Henrietta Anna Countess of Carnarvon in memory of his father and her husband Henry Herbert 3rd Earl of Carnarvon Between 1839 and 1842 his father the third earl had employed Sir Charles Barry to turn the Georgian Highclere house into a Jacobethan castle The interiors and west wing were carried out by Sir Charles Barry s assistant Thomas Allom who also provided the design of the funerary chapel mausoleum The entrance hallway vestibule inside was designed by Sir Gilbert Scott The work on the house was complete by 1878 1869 1870 Church of St Michael and All Angels Highclere by Sir Gilbert Scott 1870 Concrete Cottages Long Piddle Burghclere Bottom Scouses Corner Kingsclere or Sydmonton road Old Burghclere Rare and early concrete or mass concrete estate housing The apparatus employed in the construction could have been that patented and manufactured by Messrs Drake Brothers amp Reid of London in 1868 Designed possibly by Thomas Robjohn Wonnacott or Charles Barry Jr 11 c Around the same time neighbouring landowner Lord Ashburton d and his clerk of works Thomas Potter who wrote Concrete its use in building and the construction of concrete walls floors etc 1877 12 e built at least one pair of concrete cottages in the Wiltshire villages of All Cannings and Steeple Langford Carnarvon had long been thinking about labourers cottages and accompanying allotments f The Reading Mercury reported the Burghclere project on Saturday 30 October 1869 BURGHCLERE Considerable amount of interest has been excited in this locality on the subject of Cheap Dwellings for the Working Classes owing to a report that the Earl of Carnarvon was about to start the new system of building houses in concrete His Lordship has already commenced the erection of a block of three cottages at Burghclere Bottom and no doubt the result will be anticipated with much interest both by landed proprietors and tenant farmers This plan if successful will settle much controversy as to the predictability of building suitable farm cottages at a cheap rate as up to this time cottages in brickwork do not afford interest on the capital expended The work is to be done with Tall s Patent Concrete Machine and is not expected to cost more than 6L 6 per rod standard thickness a rod is 5 meters or 5 5 yard 16 5 feet Many buildings of various descriptions have already been erected on this principle throughout the country and competent judges have pronounced them the exact kind of building that is wanted They are said to have a neat appearance when completed and are not only stronger and more durable than brickwork but warmer and consequently more dry and healthy Reading Mercury Saturday 30 October 1869 1874 1881 Villa Altachiara Highclere in Italian Villa Carnarvon near Portofino Liguria A massive villa overlooking Portofino It was still owned by the Herberts when Evelyn Waugh visited in 1936 g Marriages and issue EditLord Carnarvon married twice His first marriage was in 1861 to Lady Evelyn Stanhope 1834 1875 daughter of George Stanhope 6th Earl of Chesterfield and Hon Anne Elizabeth Weld Forester by whom he had one son and three daughters George Herbert 5th Earl of Carnarvon 1866 1923 eldest son and heir the financial backer of the excavation of the tomb of Tutankhamun Lady Winifred Herbert married as her second husband Herbert Gardner 1st Baron Burghclere and was the mother of Evelyn Gardner who married the novelist Evelyn Waugh Evelyn Gardner s marriage soon ended in divorce and despite the opposition of the Herbert family Waugh remarried to her half first cousin 13 Laura Herbert a daughter of Aubrey Herbert of Pixton a son of the 4th Earl by his second wife Lady Margaret Herbert married George Herbert Duckworth a notable civil servant and half brother of the novelist Virginia Woolf and of the artist Vanessa Bell Lady Victoria Herbert Following his first wife s death in 1875 Lord Carnarvon married his first cousin Elizabeth Catherine Howard 1857 1929 in 1878 She was a daughter of Henry Howard of Greystoke Castle near Penrith Cumberland brother of Henrietta Anna Molyneux Howard 1804 1876 wife of Henry Herbert 3rd Earl of Carnarvon a son of Lord Henry Howard Molyneux Howard and younger brother of Bernard Howard 12th Duke of Norfolk Elizabeth Howard s brother was Esme Howard 1st Baron Howard of Penrith By his second wife he had two further sons Hon Aubrey Nigel Henry Molyneux Herbert 1880 1923 of Pixton Park in Somerset and of Teversal 14 15 in Nottinghamshire 16 soldier diplomat traveller intelligence officer associated with Albanian independence and Conservative Member of Parliament for Yeovil His daughter Laura Herbert was the second wife of Evelyn Waugh Hon Mervyn Robert Howard Molyneux Herbert 1882 1929 of Tetton Kingston St Mary Somerset third son second son by second wife a diplomat and cricketer Tetton was a former Acland property bequeathed to him by his father Death and burial EditLord Carnarvon died in June 1890 aged 59 at Portman Square in London His second wife survived him by almost forty years and died in February 1929 aged 72 Notes Edit Gaol is an older British English version of the American English jail more usually found in official documents and names of prisons in the United Kingdom and Ireland For example Kilmainham Gaol Reading Gaol etc Long Piddle Burghclere Bottom Scouses Corner on the north side of the Kingsclere and Sydmonton road Old Burghclere The Drake Patent Concrete Building Company was founded in 1868 A cousin of Carnarvon s successor as Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire Thomas Baring 1st Earl of Northbrook Potter s home at 22 Havelock Road Croydon is still there His late September 1866 address to the Highclere Agricultural Association at Burghclere on the subject of Labourers Cottages in Ireland was reported in at least the Dublin Evening Mail and the Glasgow Herald Prince Frederick William of Prussia and Victoria Princess Royal stayed there circa 1886 Elizabeth Chapin Patterson daughter of Simeon B Chapin rented it for Avatar Meher Baba in July 1933 It is also associated with Norina Matchabelli and Contessa Francesca Vacca Agusta who died there It is now owned by the footballer Samuel Eto References Edit Charmley 2013 McConville 1995 p 97 Ch 3 Reader s Digest Association South Africa 1992 p 182 Mostert 1992 p 1247 Cana 1909 p 89 Ch VII Theal 1902 p 402 3 Meredith 2007 p 63 Michell 1910 p 109 Statham 1881 p 239 Parker 2013 p 37 Lord Carnarvon Collins 1959 Potter 1908 Obituary Bridget Grant The Telegraph 23 July 2005 Retrieved 17 July 2019 Monument to Lord Carnarvon Memorial Brushford Church Somerset Ref DD DRU HERBERT FAMILY OF PIXTON PARK Dulverton Somerset Heritage Centre The Teversal estate in Nottinghamshire formerly belonging to the Molyneux family was brought into the Herbert family by Henrietta Howard daughter of Lord Henry Howard Molyneux Howard of Greystoke who married Henry Herbert Lord Porchester later 3rd Earl of Carnarvon in 1830 Mellors 1924 p 265 Cana Frank Richardson 1909 South Africa From the Great Trek to the Union Chapman amp Hall Limited Charmley John 2013 Splendid Isolation Britain the Balance of Power and the Origins of the First World War Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 30925 2 Collins Peter 1959 Concrete the vision of a new architecture a study of Auguste Perret and his precursors Horizon Press McConville Sean 1995 Chapter 3 Carnarvon and National Penal Policy English Local Prisons 1860 1900 Next Only to Death Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 03295 7 Mellors Robert 1924 Men of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Being Biographical Notices of Five Hundred Men and Women who Were Born Or Worked Or Abode Or Died in the County of City of Nottingham Bell Meredith Martin 2007 Diamonds Gold and War The Making of South Africa Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8614 5 Michell Sir Lewis 1910 The Life and Times of the Right Honourable Cecil John Rhodes 1853 1902 Vol 1 New York M Kennerley Mostert Noel 1992 Frontiers the epic of South Africa s creation and the tragedy of the Xhosa people Knopf Parker Alexander 2013 50 People Who Stuffed Up South Africa Jacana ISBN 978 0 9870437 2 6 Potter Thomas 1908 Concrete its use in building and the construction of walls floors etc Reader s Digest Association South Africa 1992 Confederation from the Barrel of a Gun Illustrated history of South Africa the real story Reader s Digest Association South Africa ISBN 978 0 947008 90 1 Statham Francis Reginald 1881 Blacks Boers amp British A Three cornered Problem Macmillan and Company p 239 Theal George McCall 1902 Progress of South Africa in the Century Toronto Linscott Further reading EditLee Sidney 1891 Herbert Henry Howard Molyneux In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 26 London Smith Elder amp Co Underhill Frank de Kiewiet C W 1955 Duffering Carnarvon Correspondences 1874 1878 Toronto Champlain Society Publications Roberts Andrew 2000 Salisbury Victorian Titan London Orion Books This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Carnarvon Earldom of Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Henry Herbert 4th Earl of Carnarvon Works by or about Henry Herbert 4th Earl of Carnarvon at Internet Archive Edited compilation of the Duffering Carnarvon Correspondences 1874 1878 provided by the Champlain Society Political officesPreceded byChichester Fortescue Under Secretary of State for the Colonies1858 1859 Succeeded byChichester FortescuePreceded byEdward Cardwell Secretary of State for the Colonies1866 1867 Succeeded byThe Duke of Buckingham and ChandosPreceded byThe Earl of Kimberley Secretary of State for the Colonies1874 1878 Succeeded bySir Michael Hicks Beach BtPreceded byThe Earl Spencer Lord Lieutenant of Ireland1885 1886 Succeeded byThe Earl of AberdeenHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Marquess of Winchester Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire1887 1890 Succeeded byThe Earl of NorthbrookPeerage of Great BritainPreceded byHenry John Herbert Earl of Carnarvon1849 1890 Succeeded byGeorge Herbert Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Herbert 4th Earl of Carnarvon amp oldid 1130988650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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