fbpx
Wikipedia

Victor Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol

Victor Frederick Cochrane Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol (6 October 1915 – 10 March 1985), was a British aristocrat, hereditary peer and businessman. He was a member of the House of Lords, Chancellor of the International Monarchist League, and an active businessman who later became a tax exile in Monaco.[1]

The Marquess of Bristol
Lord Bristol and Lady Juliet Wentworth-Fitzwilliam on their wedding day, 1960
Marquess of Bristol
In office
5 April 1960 – 10 March 1985
Personal details
Born
Victor Frederick Cochrane Hervey

(1915-10-06)6 October 1915
Died10 March 1985(1985-03-10) (aged 69)
Spouses
Pauline Bolton
(m. 1949; div. 1959)
(m. 1960; div. 1972)
(m. 1974)
Children
Parent(s)Herbert Hervey, 5th Marquess of Bristol
Lady Jean Cochrane

Victor Hervey was the only son of Herbert Hervey, 5th Marquess of Bristol. He acquired a notorious reputation as a playboy and petty criminal in the 1930s, which culminated in him being imprisoned for jewellery theft in 1939. He inherited the Marquessate on his father's death in 1960, and acquired a large fortune through this and his business dealings. He was married three times and is the father of John Hervey, 7th Marquess of Bristol, Frederick Hervey, 8th Marquess of Bristol, Lord Nicholas Hervey, Lady Victoria Hervey, and Lady Isabella Hervey. He spent his final years in Monaco to avoid income tax with his third wife and three youngest children.

Early life edit

Victor Hervey was born on 6 October 1915, the only son of Lord Herbert Hervey, later 5th Marquess of Bristol, and Lady Jean Cochrane, a daughter of Douglas Cochrane, 12th Earl of Dundonald[2] and Winifred, Countess of Dundonald. His godmother was Queen Victoria Eugenie of Spain.

He was educated at Eton and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, but was asked to leave the latter, because of bad temperament.[3]

Until 1951, he had no title, as his father was a younger son and inherited the family titles and estates from his older brother in that year.[4]

Crime and imprisonment edit

Victor Hervey became involved in theft and small crime as a young adult[citation needed]; he has been called the Pink Panther of his day and the ringleader of a gang of former public school boys known as the Mayfair Playboys,[5] who, whilst drunk, and as a dare, assaulted and robbed a jeweller from Cartier, as a result of which two of them (but not Hervey) were sentenced to being flogged with the cat o' nine tails.[6][7] Hervey seems not to have actually taken a direct part in that robbery himself.[8] It has been said that he is remembered mainly for having taken part in a jewel robbery which he did not in fact commit, though he was convicted of a similar offence, in the same decade and in the same part of London (Mayfair).[9]

In July 1939, Hervey was arrested and charged with stealing jewellery, rings and a mink fur coat with a total value of £2,500 from a premises in Queen Street, Mayfair, and £2,860 of jewellery from a property on Park Lane. He was refused bail,[10] and imprisoned for three years.[11] The recorder of the court observed: "The way of the amateur criminal is hard. But the way of the professional is disastrous".[1] He later sold an article about his life and exploits to a newspaper.[12] His father, who had led a respectable life, as had been the case for all the men of the Hervey family since the Victorian era, broke down in tears on hearing the sentence.[3]

Business dealings edit

Prior to receiving his trust income, Victor Hervey declared bankruptcy in 1937 with debts of £123,955, (approximately £8.51 million today).[13] He had been selling guns during the Spanish Civil War to both sides, hoping to receive £30,000 as a bribe which failed and led to the debts.[3] He nevertheless continued in his arms-dealing activities and was Franco's principal agent for many years. Bristol went on to amass a fortune, both inherited and earned, estimated to be in excess of £50 million.[citation needed]

In 1941, Victor Hervey claimed to have been listed in a secret document written by Heinrich Himmler as an enemy of the Third Reich, but there is no evidence that such a document ever existed.[3]

From 1951, he held the courtesy title of Earl Jermyn, by which name he was known until inheriting the Marquessate in 1960, when he became also Earl of Bristol and Baron Hervey of Ickworth in Suffolk, Hereditary High Steward of the Liberty of Bury St Edmunds, and patron of thirty Church of England benefices, with landed estates in Suffolk, Essex, Lincolnshire, and Dominica in the West Indies.

In 1973, he was recorded as having a great many business interests, with estates in Suffolk, Lincolnshire and Essex. He was then Chairman of Sleaford Investments Limited, Eastern Caravan Parks Ltd., Estates Associates Ltd., Ickworth Forestry Contractors Ltd., Cyprus Enterprises Co., V.L.C. Associates Ltd., Marquis of Bristol & Co., The Bristol Publishing Company, Radio Maria Ickworth Automatic Sales Ltd., Bristol International Airways Ltd., Dominca Enterprises Co., World Liberty Plots and other companies. He owned the Ickworth Stud, Suffolk, and the Emerald Hillside Estates in Dominica.[14]

He was sometime President of the National Yacht Harbour Association, a member of the House of Lords Yacht Club, the Hurlingham Club, and the East Hill Club, Nassau, Bahamas.[14]

Family edit

On 6 October 1949, Mr Victor Hervey, as the future Bristol then was, married Pauline Mary Bolton, daughter of Herbert Coxon Bolton; they were divorced in 1959. They had one son, Frederick William John Augustus Hervey, 7th Marquess of Bristol (15 September 1954 – 10 January 1999) who married Francesca Fisher in 1984 (and divorced in 1987).[4]

Lord Bristol was alleged to have been a harsh father to his eldest son, according to friends of the latter. "He treated his son and heir with indifference and contempt", said journalist Anthony Haden-Guest. The Marquess of Blandford summed up the relationship: "Victor created the monster that John became."[1]

On 23 April 1960, eighteen days after his father's death, he married secondly Lady Juliet Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, daughter of Peter Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 8th Earl Fitzwilliam, and twenty years his junior.[4] The Fitzwilliam family were not happy about the marriage, owing to Victor's reputation.[3] The couple were divorced in 1972, having had one son, Lord Nicholas Hervey (26 November 1961 – 26 January 1998),[4] and one daughter, Lady Ann Hervey (stillborn, 26 February 1965). Both marriages failed because of Victor's infidelity; Lady Juliet subsequently saying "If you want to screw hookers when you are married, you make damn sure you are not caught".[3]

His third wife was Yvonne Marie Sutton, whom he married on 12 July 1974 at Caxton Hall.[15] They had a son, Frederick Hervey, 8th Marquess of Bristol (born 1979), and two daughters: Lady Victoria Hervey (born 1976) and Lady Isabella Hervey (born 1982), who married Christophe de Pauw.[4] Victor’s eldest son, John, by then Earl Jermyn, did not like Yvonne, and was upset about the third marriage, and with his brother Lord Nicholas unsuccessfully sued his father, after his will named Yvonne and her children as his main beneficiaries.[1]

Monaco and other interests edit

In early 1979, Bristol, with his third wife and young children, moved to Monte Carlo, as tax exiles. He reportedly lowered the Union Flag at his home in Belgravia before leaving, vowing never to set foot on English soil again.[16] Although living in Monte Carlo in an apartment, he continued to employ a butler and a nanny.[17]

Bristol was vice-president of the UK Taxpayers Union, was a member of the West India Committee, and was considered an expert on Central American affairs.[14] He was also Vice-President of the English-Speaking Union (East Region), and a generous donor to the Ambulance Corps in Northern Ireland.[18]

He was a member, until his death, of the International Monarchist League, joining its Grand Council in 1964,[14] from which time he also became a patron. In 1975 he was elected as the League's Chancellor.[19][20] He was also a long-standing member of the Conservative Monday Club.

The Marquess was a patron of the arts and a collector, an acknowledged authority on Lawrence Alma-Tadema and James Tissot, and "a lover of art and beauty in all its forms".[21] He had acquired a substantial amount of 19th-century artwork at the time of his death.[2]

Death edit

 
Formentor, Monaco

The 6th Marquess of Bristol died in Monaco on 10 March 1985, aged 69, and was buried in Menton, France. On his grave was inscribed his motto "Je n'oublieray jamais" ("I shall never forget"). At the time of his death, he was living at 1E Formentor, Avenue Princesse Grace, Monte Carlo.[22]

On 30 August, probate was granted in London for Bristol’s estate in England and Wales, valued at only £7,508. His name was stated as “Most Honourable Marquis Victor Frederick COCHRANE”.[22]

In October 2010, Bristol's last surviving son, the 8th Marquess of Bristol, repatriated his father’s remains,[23] which were reburied in the family vault at the parish church of Ickworth, after a memorial service in St Leonard's Church, Horringer in Suffolk.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Haden-Guest, Anthony. "The end of the peer", The Observer, 22 January 2006. Accessed 17 May 2008.
  2. ^ a b Wynne-Parker, Michael (19 March 1985). "The Marquess of Bristol". The Times. London. p. 16. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Heirs and Disgraces". The Times. 19 February 1994. pp. 10–12 [S2]. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Featured Families - Bristol". Burke's Peerage. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  5. ^ McLaren, Angus (10 November 2017). "How playboys almost got away with vicious diamond ring robbery". mirror. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  6. ^ Day, Peter. "It girls' father was Pink Panther thief", The Sunday Times, 23 September 2007. Accessed 17 May 2008.
  7. ^ Bale, Joanna."Junkie marquess died penniless after spending millions on drugs", The Times Online, 23 September 2005. Accessed 17 May 2008.
  8. ^ "Suffolk aristocrat's 'criminal career'". East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  9. ^ Silvester, Christopher (23 December 2009). "Splendour & Squalor by Marcus Scriven: review". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Jewel Theft Charges". The Times. London. 2 May 1939. p. 11. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  11. ^ Anthony Haden-Guest (22 January 2006). "The end of the peer". The Observer. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  12. ^ Marcus Scriven (2009). Splendour and Squalor.
  13. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d Kelly's Handbook 1973, London, 99th edition, p. 300
  15. ^ "Marriages". The Times. 13 July 1974. p. 14. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  16. ^ "Monte Carlo or Bust". The Times. London. 5 March 1983. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  17. ^ Michael Wynne-Parker, If My Table Could Talk: Insights into Remarkable Lives (Authorhouse, 2011), p. 45
  18. ^ The Monarchist, edited by Jeffrey Finestone, London, no.66, 1985 edition, p.6.
  19. ^ The Monarchist, edited by Guy Stair Sainty, London, nos. 46–47, Winter-Spring 1975–76 edition, p.5.
  20. ^ The Sunday Times, 23 September 2007.
  21. ^ The Monarchist, edited by Jeffrey Finestone, London, no.66, 1985 edition, pps:5–6.
  22. ^ a b ”COCHRANE most honourable marquis Victor Frederick” in Probate Index for England and Wales 1985, online at probatesearch.service.gov.uk, accessed 7 April 2020
  23. ^ "Marquess of Bristol's body to be dug up after 25 years". Daily Telegraph. 12 September 2010.
  24. ^ Jo Thewliss, Hervey family gather in Suffolk for marquess’ funeral, East Anglian Daily Times, 8 October 2010

Sources edit

  • Burkes Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage. Edited by Peter Townend, 105th edition. London, 1970, p. 345.
  • The Monarchist, 1985, number 66, Norwich, UK (Memorial on p. 3).
  • De-la-Noy, Michael. The House of Hervey. London, 2001. ISBN 1-84119-309-7
  • "The police file on Victor Hervey" (PDF). The Times. London.
  • The Real Pink Panther: Lord Victor Hervey – a TV documentary aired on Channel 4 on 2 March 2009.

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Victor Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol

victor, hervey, marquess, bristol, victor, frederick, cochrane, hervey, marquess, bristol, october, 1915, march, 1985, british, aristocrat, hereditary, peer, businessman, member, house, lords, chancellor, international, monarchist, league, active, businessman,. Victor Frederick Cochrane Hervey 6th Marquess of Bristol 6 October 1915 10 March 1985 was a British aristocrat hereditary peer and businessman He was a member of the House of Lords Chancellor of the International Monarchist League and an active businessman who later became a tax exile in Monaco 1 The Most HonourableThe Marquess of BristolLord Bristol and Lady Juliet Wentworth Fitzwilliam on their wedding day 1960Marquess of BristolIn office 5 April 1960 10 March 1985Personal detailsBornVictor Frederick Cochrane Hervey 1915 10 06 6 October 1915Died10 March 1985 1985 03 10 aged 69 SpousesPauline Bolton m 1949 div 1959 wbr Lady Juliet Wentworth Fitzwilliam m 1960 div 1972 wbr Yvonne Marie Sutton m 1974 wbr ChildrenJohn Hervey 7th Marquess of Bristol Lord Nicholas Hervey Lady Anne Hervey Lady Victoria Hervey Frederick Hervey 8th Marquess of Bristol Lady Isabella HerveyParent s Herbert Hervey 5th Marquess of BristolLady Jean CochraneVictor Hervey was the only son of Herbert Hervey 5th Marquess of Bristol He acquired a notorious reputation as a playboy and petty criminal in the 1930s which culminated in him being imprisoned for jewellery theft in 1939 He inherited the Marquessate on his father s death in 1960 and acquired a large fortune through this and his business dealings He was married three times and is the father of John Hervey 7th Marquess of Bristol Frederick Hervey 8th Marquess of Bristol Lord Nicholas Hervey Lady Victoria Hervey and Lady Isabella Hervey He spent his final years in Monaco to avoid income tax with his third wife and three youngest children Contents 1 Early life 2 Crime and imprisonment 3 Business dealings 4 Family 5 Monaco and other interests 6 Death 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly life editVictor Hervey was born on 6 October 1915 the only son of Lord Herbert Hervey later 5th Marquess of Bristol and Lady Jean Cochrane a daughter of Douglas Cochrane 12th Earl of Dundonald 2 and Winifred Countess of Dundonald His godmother was Queen Victoria Eugenie of Spain He was educated at Eton and the Royal Military College Sandhurst but was asked to leave the latter because of bad temperament 3 Until 1951 he had no title as his father was a younger son and inherited the family titles and estates from his older brother in that year 4 Crime and imprisonment editVictor Hervey became involved in theft and small crime as a young adult citation needed he has been called the Pink Panther of his day and the ringleader of a gang of former public school boys known as the Mayfair Playboys 5 who whilst drunk and as a dare assaulted and robbed a jeweller from Cartier as a result of which two of them but not Hervey were sentenced to being flogged with the cat o nine tails 6 7 Hervey seems not to have actually taken a direct part in that robbery himself 8 It has been said that he is remembered mainly for having taken part in a jewel robbery which he did not in fact commit though he was convicted of a similar offence in the same decade and in the same part of London Mayfair 9 In July 1939 Hervey was arrested and charged with stealing jewellery rings and a mink fur coat with a total value of 2 500 from a premises in Queen Street Mayfair and 2 860 of jewellery from a property on Park Lane He was refused bail 10 and imprisoned for three years 11 The recorder of the court observed The way of the amateur criminal is hard But the way of the professional is disastrous 1 He later sold an article about his life and exploits to a newspaper 12 His father who had led a respectable life as had been the case for all the men of the Hervey family since the Victorian era broke down in tears on hearing the sentence 3 Business dealings editPrior to receiving his trust income Victor Hervey declared bankruptcy in 1937 with debts of 123 955 approximately 8 51 million today 13 He had been selling guns during the Spanish Civil War to both sides hoping to receive 30 000 as a bribe which failed and led to the debts 3 He nevertheless continued in his arms dealing activities and was Franco s principal agent for many years Bristol went on to amass a fortune both inherited and earned estimated to be in excess of 50 million citation needed In 1941 Victor Hervey claimed to have been listed in a secret document written by Heinrich Himmler as an enemy of the Third Reich but there is no evidence that such a document ever existed 3 From 1951 he held the courtesy title of Earl Jermyn by which name he was known until inheriting the Marquessate in 1960 when he became also Earl of Bristol and Baron Hervey of Ickworth in Suffolk Hereditary High Steward of the Liberty of Bury St Edmunds and patron of thirty Church of England benefices with landed estates in Suffolk Essex Lincolnshire and Dominica in the West Indies In 1973 he was recorded as having a great many business interests with estates in Suffolk Lincolnshire and Essex He was then Chairman of Sleaford Investments Limited Eastern Caravan Parks Ltd Estates Associates Ltd Ickworth Forestry Contractors Ltd Cyprus Enterprises Co V L C Associates Ltd Marquis of Bristol amp Co The Bristol Publishing Company Radio Maria Ickworth Automatic Sales Ltd Bristol International Airways Ltd Dominca Enterprises Co World Liberty Plots and other companies He owned the Ickworth Stud Suffolk and the Emerald Hillside Estates in Dominica 14 He was sometime President of the National Yacht Harbour Association a member of the House of Lords Yacht Club the Hurlingham Club and the East Hill Club Nassau Bahamas 14 Family editOn 6 October 1949 Mr Victor Hervey as the future Bristol then was married Pauline Mary Bolton daughter of Herbert Coxon Bolton they were divorced in 1959 They had one son Frederick William John Augustus Hervey 7th Marquess of Bristol 15 September 1954 10 January 1999 who married Francesca Fisher in 1984 and divorced in 1987 4 Lord Bristol was alleged to have been a harsh father to his eldest son according to friends of the latter He treated his son and heir with indifference and contempt said journalist Anthony Haden Guest The Marquess of Blandford summed up the relationship Victor created the monster that John became 1 On 23 April 1960 eighteen days after his father s death he married secondly Lady Juliet Wentworth Fitzwilliam daughter of Peter Wentworth Fitzwilliam 8th Earl Fitzwilliam and twenty years his junior 4 The Fitzwilliam family were not happy about the marriage owing to Victor s reputation 3 The couple were divorced in 1972 having had one son Lord Nicholas Hervey 26 November 1961 26 January 1998 4 and one daughter Lady Ann Hervey stillborn 26 February 1965 Both marriages failed because of Victor s infidelity Lady Juliet subsequently saying If you want to screw hookers when you are married you make damn sure you are not caught 3 His third wife was Yvonne Marie Sutton whom he married on 12 July 1974 at Caxton Hall 15 They had a son Frederick Hervey 8th Marquess of Bristol born 1979 and two daughters Lady Victoria Hervey born 1976 and Lady Isabella Hervey born 1982 who married Christophe de Pauw 4 Victor s eldest son John by then Earl Jermyn did not like Yvonne and was upset about the third marriage and with his brother Lord Nicholas unsuccessfully sued his father after his will named Yvonne and her children as his main beneficiaries 1 Monaco and other interests editIn early 1979 Bristol with his third wife and young children moved to Monte Carlo as tax exiles He reportedly lowered the Union Flag at his home in Belgravia before leaving vowing never to set foot on English soil again 16 Although living in Monte Carlo in an apartment he continued to employ a butler and a nanny 17 Bristol was vice president of the UK Taxpayers Union was a member of the West India Committee and was considered an expert on Central American affairs 14 He was also Vice President of the English Speaking Union East Region and a generous donor to the Ambulance Corps in Northern Ireland 18 He was a member until his death of the International Monarchist League joining its Grand Council in 1964 14 from which time he also became a patron In 1975 he was elected as the League s Chancellor 19 20 He was also a long standing member of the Conservative Monday Club The Marquess was a patron of the arts and a collector an acknowledged authority on Lawrence Alma Tadema and James Tissot and a lover of art and beauty in all its forms 21 He had acquired a substantial amount of 19th century artwork at the time of his death 2 Death edit nbsp Formentor MonacoThe 6th Marquess of Bristol died in Monaco on 10 March 1985 aged 69 and was buried in Menton France On his grave was inscribed his motto Je n oublieray jamais I shall never forget At the time of his death he was living at 1E Formentor Avenue Princesse Grace Monte Carlo 22 On 30 August probate was granted in London for Bristol s estate in England and Wales valued at only 7 508 His name was stated as Most Honourable Marquis Victor Frederick COCHRANE 22 In October 2010 Bristol s last surviving son the 8th Marquess of Bristol repatriated his father s remains 23 which were reburied in the family vault at the parish church of Ickworth after a memorial service in St Leonard s Church Horringer in Suffolk 24 See also editMarquess of Bristol for the history of the Hervey familyReferences edit a b c d Haden Guest Anthony The end of the peer The Observer 22 January 2006 Accessed 17 May 2008 a b Wynne Parker Michael 19 March 1985 The Marquess of Bristol The Times London p 16 Retrieved 25 September 2016 a b c d e f Heirs and Disgraces The Times 19 February 1994 pp 10 12 S2 Retrieved 16 September 2016 a b c d e Featured Families Bristol Burke s Peerage Retrieved 22 September 2016 McLaren Angus 10 November 2017 How playboys almost got away with vicious diamond ring robbery mirror Retrieved 11 November 2017 Day Peter It girls father was Pink Panther thief The Sunday Times 23 September 2007 Accessed 17 May 2008 Bale Joanna Junkie marquess died penniless after spending millions on drugs The Times Online 23 September 2005 Accessed 17 May 2008 Suffolk aristocrat s criminal career East Anglian Daily Times Retrieved 11 November 2017 Silvester Christopher 23 December 2009 Splendour amp Squalor by Marcus Scriven review The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 11 November 2017 Jewel Theft Charges The Times London 2 May 1939 p 11 Retrieved 25 September 2016 Anthony Haden Guest 22 January 2006 The end of the peer The Observer Retrieved 9 June 2016 Marcus Scriven 2009 Splendour and Squalor UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 a b c d Kelly s Handbook 1973 London 99th edition p 300 Marriages The Times 13 July 1974 p 14 Retrieved 16 September 2016 Monte Carlo or Bust The Times London 5 March 1983 Retrieved 17 September 2016 Michael Wynne Parker If My Table Could Talk Insights into Remarkable Lives Authorhouse 2011 p 45 The Monarchist edited by Jeffrey Finestone London no 66 1985 edition p 6 The Monarchist edited by Guy Stair Sainty London nos 46 47 Winter Spring 1975 76 edition p 5 The Sunday Times 23 September 2007 The Monarchist edited by Jeffrey Finestone London no 66 1985 edition pps 5 6 a b COCHRANE most honourable marquis Victor Frederick in Probate Index for England and Wales 1985 online at probatesearch service gov uk accessed 7 April 2020 Marquess of Bristol s body to be dug up after 25 years Daily Telegraph 12 September 2010 Jo Thewliss Hervey family gather in Suffolk for marquess funeral East Anglian Daily Times 8 October 2010Sources editBurkes Peerage Baronetage and Knightage Edited by Peter Townend 105th edition London 1970 p 345 The Monarchist 1985 number 66 Norwich UK Memorial on p 3 De la Noy Michael The House of Hervey London 2001 ISBN 1 84119 309 7 The police file on Victor Hervey PDF The Times London The Real Pink Panther Lord Victor Hervey a TV documentary aired on Channel 4 on 2 March 2009 External links editHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Victor Hervey 6th Marquess of BristolPeerage of the United KingdomPreceded byHerbert Hervey Marquess of Bristol1960 1985 Succeeded byJohn Hervey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victor Hervey 6th Marquess of Bristol amp oldid 1134458524, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.