The Marquess of Bristol | |
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Lord Bristol and Lady Juliet Fitzwilliam on their wedding day |
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Born | 6 October 1915 |
Died | 10 March 1985 | (aged 69)
Title | Marquess of Bristol |
Spouse(s) | Pauline Bolton Lady Juliet FitzWilliam Yvonne Marie Sutton |
Parents | Herbert Hervey, 5th Marquess of Bristol Lady Jean Cochrane |
Victor Frederick Cochrane Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol (6 October 1915–10 March 1985), was a British aristocrat. 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 6th Marquess of Bristol was the only son of Herbert Arthur Robert Hervey, 5th Marquess of Bristol, and Lady Jean Cochrane, the daughter of the 12th Earl of Dundonald. His godmother was Queen Victoria Eugenie of Spain. He held the titles of Earl of Bristol, Earl Jermyn (by which title he was known until inheriting the Marquessate), and Baron Hervey of Ickworth in Suffolk. He was Hereditary High Steward of the Liberty of Bury St Edmunds, was patron of thirty (clerical) livings, and held estates in Suffolk, Essex, Lincolnshire, and also in Dominica, in the West Indies. He was educated at Eton College and at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. He was sometime President of the National Yacht Harbour Association, a member of the House of Lords Yacht and East Hill (Nassau, Bahamas) clubs and the Hurlingham Club.[2]
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The Marquess married three times:
Lord Bristol was alleged to have been a harsh father to his oldest son, according to friends of the latter. "He treated his son and heir with indifference and contempt," said Anthony Haden-Guest. Marquess of Blandford summed up the relationship: "Victor created the monster that John became."[1]
In his youth Victor Hervey was called "Mayfair's Number One Playboy".[4] It is said that he was the Pink Panther of his day and the ringleader of a gang of former public school boys known as the Mayfair Playboys, who assaulted and robbed a jeweller from Cartier, as a result of which two of them were sentenced to being flogged with the cat-o'-nine-tails. [5][6]
In 1939 he was gaoled for three years for two Mayfair jewellery robberies, made when he was 22 years old. The court recorder 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 the newspapers.[4]
Prior to receiving his trust income, the Hon. Victor Hervey went bankrupt in 1937, aged just 21, with debts of £123,955, (approximately £5.93 million today).[7] He had been selling guns during the Spanish Civil War to both sides, ultimately selling the Republicans out to Franco; his bankruptcy may have resulted from an arms deal which went wrong. 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.
In 1973[8] 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 Emerald Hillside Estates, in Dominica.
Bristol was vice-president of the UK Taxpayers Union, a member of the West India Committee, and an expert on Central American affairs.[9] He was also Vice-President of the English-Speaking Union (East Region), and a generous donor to the Ambulance Corp in Northern Ireland.[10],
He was a member, until his death, of the International Monarchist League, joining its Grand Council in 1964[11] from which time he also became a patron. In 1975 he was elected as the league's Chancellor.[12][13] He was also a long-standing member of the Conservative Monday Club.
Bristol, his third wife and family moved to Monte Carlo, Monaco, in early 1979 as tax exiles. He died there on 10 March 1985, aged 69 and was buried in Menton, France. On his grave was inscribed his motto "Je n'oublieray jamais" ("I will never forget"). In October 2010 his last surviving son, the 8th Marquess of Bristol, repatriated his remains, which were reburied in the family vault at Ickworth Church after a service in St Leonard's Church at Horringer.
Victor Bristol was a patron of the arts and a collector, an acknowledged authority on Alma Tadema and Tissot, "a lover of art and beauty in all its forms."[14],
A two page obituary for Victor, 6th Marquess of Bristol, appeared in the 1985 edition of the The Monarchist[15], written by Michael Wynne-Parker, who described Victor Hervey as "no fairweather friend, he was staunch, loyal, dependable, with a sense of humour. Long will I remember his cheerful voice speaking over the telephone from Monarco where he enjoyed his final years. Despite the pressures of life he remained bright of manner and optimistic.... His detractors and those who knew him slightly only saw the colourful and flamboyant side of his character; but it was as a thorough and practical man of business that Lord Bristol restored The Monarchist and the Monarchist League to surpass its former glory."
Peerage of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Herbert Hervey |
Marquess of Bristol 1960–1985 |
Succeeded by John Hervey |