Harriet Mordaunt

Harriet Mordaunt

Harriet Sarah, Lady Mordaunt (7 February 1848-9 May 1906[1]), formerly Harriet Moncreiffe, was the Scottish wife of an English baronet and Member of Parliament, Sir Charles Mordaunt. She was the respondent in a sensational divorce case in which the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) was embroiled and, after a counter-petition led to a finding of mental disorder, spent the remaining thirty-six years of her life in a lunatic asylum.

Contents

Background and marriage

Lady Mordaunt (as she is referred to throughout this article[2]) was born Harriet Sarah Moncreiffe. Her parents were Sir Thomas Moncreiffe of that Ilk,[3] 7th baronet (1822–1879) of Moncreiffe House,[4] Perthshire, Scotland and his wife, Lady Louisa Hay-Drummond (died 1898), eldest daughter of the 11th Earl of Kinnoull.[5] They had sixteen children, including eight "beautiful" daughters who were, in due course, mostly "extremely well married".[6] Lady Mordaunt was their fourth child (and fourth daughter). Her sister Georgina (the Moncreiffes' third daughter, known to the family as Georgy) became Countess of Dudley, her husband having been dubbed "frizzle wig" by Lady Mordaunt.[7] In 1920 Margot Asquith recalled that "groups of beauties like the Moncrieffes [sic] ... were to be seen in the salons of the [eighteen] 'eighties. There is nothing at all like this in London today"[8]

Sir Thomas Moncreiffe served in the Grenadier Guards and become a captain in the Atholl Highlanders. He was captain of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club at St. Andrews.

The atmosphere at Moncreiffe has been described as "free and easy".[9] During her childhood Lady Mordaunt was acquainted with the Prince of Wales[10] and, after his marriage to Princess Alexandra of Denmark in 1863, attended informal parties, including dances at Abergeldie Castle,[11] near Balmoral, which the Prince used as his Highland home.[12] In November 1865 she was invited to Sandringham, the Waleses' house in Norfolk, and subsequently joined the Prince and Princess on various occasions in London.[13] Lady Mordaunt grew up to be pretty and flirtatious,[14] but also headstrong[15] and, ultimately, rather unbalanced.[16]

Marriage to Sir Charles Mordaunt

Walton Hall, Warwickshire, home of Sir Charles and Lady Mordaunt

On 6 December 1866, at the age of 18, Lady Mordaunt married Sir Charles Mordaunt, 10th baronet (1836–1897) at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Perth. Sir Charles was a Conservative M.P. for the two-member constituency of South Warwickshire from 1859 to 1868. Through his brother, John Murray Mordaunt (1837–1923), who played cricket for Warwickshire and I Zingari, he was the uncle of three other cricketing Mordaunts, H.J. (Sir Henry Mordaunt, 12th baronet), E.C. and G.J., who all appeared at county level.[17]

The couple lived at Walton Hall, Warwickshire, which, to mark his coming-of-age, Sir Charles had commissioned in the fashionable Gothic style from the architect George Gilbert Scott,[18] who later designed St. Pancras station in London.[19] A descendant of Sir Charles once counted 72 bedrooms at Walton.[20] They also had a residence in Belgrave Square, London.[21]

The Mordaunts remained part of the so-called "Marlborough House set" who were associated socially with the Prince and Princess of Wales.[22] According to later legal reports, Sir Charles made a “handsome” settlement on his wife at the time of their marriage and initially they appeared to live “most happily together”.[23] However, it became clear subsequently that Lady Mordaunt was in the habit of entertaining male guests alone while her husband was absent on Parliamentary business or engaged in his various sporting pursuits.

Lady Mordaunt’s extra-marital activities and birth of a daughter

The Mordaunts had toured Switzerland together early in their marriage, but when, in June 1868, Sir Charles prepared for an annual fishing trip to Norway, Lady Mordaunt encouraged him to go on his own. Arrangements were made for her to remain at Walton Hall in the company of a sister and another lady. However, when Sir Charles returned early from Norway, he found his wife alone. One of her maids later testified that, during Sir Charles’ absence, Lady Mordaunt had been visited in London by Viscount Cole (later 4th Earl of Enniskillen), who, after dinner, had “remained alone with her until a very late hour”; on another occasion, he had travelled with her by train from Paddington station to Reading, where he alighted from a carriage of which they had been the only occupants.[24] Other servants, who seem to have resented Lady Mordaunt's behaviour, added their own accounts of Lord Cole’s visits.[25]

Parliament rose on 28 July 1868 and Sir Charles did not defend his seat in November when the Liberal Party swept to power at the first general election since Disraeli's Reform Act of 1867.[26] By then, Lady Mordaunt was five months pregnant. On 28 February 1869[27] she gave birth prematurely[28] to a daughter, Violet Caroline.[29] The timing was significant in view of Sir Charles’ absence on his fishing trip the previous year.[30] Doctors initially feared that the child might be blind, causing Lady Mordaunt to become hysterical, imagining that this had been brought about by an hereditary sexually transmitted disease.[31] (At the time, gossip surrounding Freddy Johnstone, a close friend of the Prince of Wales, whom Lady Mordaunt shortly afterwards claimed to have been one of her lovers, was that he suffered from such a disease.[32]) Violet’s eye infection was successfully treated and no venereal infection was found in either mother or child.[33] However, following this episode, Lady Mordaunt not only declared to her husband, "Charlie, I have deceived you; the child is not yours; it’s Lord Cole’s",[34] but claimed to have committed adultery with “Lord Cole, Sir Frederick Johnstone, the Prince of Wales and others, often and in open day”[35] As one of Princess Alexandra’s biographers put it, “the ensuing scandal was immense”.[36]

Involvement of the Prince of Wales

The Prince and Princess of Wales on the their wedding day, 1863

Sir Charles forced the drawer of Lady Mordaunt's writing desk and found a number of letters to her from the Prince of Wales.[37] It was plainly unwise for the Prince to have written these and, throughout his life, he seems to have had trouble resisting such communication with women he admired.[38] However, their content (though very similar to the sort of things he wrote some years later to his mistress, Alice Keppel[39]) was innocuous.[40] When published later in provincial newspapers and the London Times, they were judged to be "simple, gossipy, everyday letters";[41] a biographer of the actress Lily Langtry, another of the Prince's mistresses, observed that "typical lines to Harriet might have come from a benevolent uncle".[42]

There is a widely recounted story of Sir Charles' returning to Walton Hall to find his wife in the company of the Prince and two white ponies, which, following the Prince’s expulsion from the premesis, he had shot in her presence.[43] However, although Sir Charles acted very bitterly towards the Prince,[44] he did not cite him in any legal action and so formal contemporaneous accounts of Lady Mordaunt’s activities tend to skirt around such episodes.

Legal proceedings

Sir Charles commenced proceedings for divorce on 20 April 1869.[45] In view of her nervous and erratic behaviour after Violet’s birth, to which the details were given full rein by her servants,[46] Lady Mordaunt’s family claimed that she was insane and unfit to plead. A counter-affidavit on behalf of Sir Charles maintained that she was feigning a mental disorder.[47] On 30 July 1869 Sir Thomas Moncreiffe, acting as his daughter’s guardian ad litem, formally alleged that, at the time the summons was served on her, she was "not of sound mind".[48] In her diary on 6 August, Princess Alexandra noted that "a commission has been ordered to investigate and report if Harriet Mordaunt is truly mad".[49]

Lord Penzance, judge in the Mordaunt divorce case

Mordaunt v. Mordaunt, Cole & Johnstone (1870)

The resulting case[50] came up for trial before Lord Penzance in the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes on 23 February 1870.[51] Having been summoned to appear as a witness, the Prince of Wales was examined for seven minutes by Lady Mordaunt's counsel, the first time that a Prince of Wales had given evidence in open court. He flatly denied any “improper familiarity” or “criminal act” with Lady Mordaunt – “Never!”[52] – and was not cross-examined by Sir Charles' counsel, William Ballantine. The Prince had sought advice about whether to accept the subpoena from, among others, the Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench, Sir Alexander Cockburn, who in advising him to do so, described Lady Mordaunt as “a lady of such apparently fragile virtue” and referred to the notion that “one to whom a woman has given herself up is bound, even at the cost of committing perjury, to protect her honour”.[53]

After a trial lasting seven days, the jury determined that Lady Mordaunt was suffering from “puerperal mania[54] at the time the summons was served on her and that she was unable to instruct a lawyer in her defence. Accordingly, Sir Charles’ petition for divorce was dismissed, while Lady Mordaunt was committed to an asylum.[55]

A conspiracy?

The convenient finding of insanity inevitably gave rise to suspicions that there was a conspiracy to silence Lady Mordaunt.[56] Reynold’s News, for example, asked why the Prince (“a young married man”) should have been “so eager to pay weekly visits to a young married woman when her husband was absent, if it was all so innocent?”[57]

There is some evidence that the “Establishment” closed ranks at a time when republican sympathies in Britain had been aroused by Queen Victoria’s virtual withdrawal from public life.[58] It seems that, in advance of the trial, the Prince's Household received private assurances that his position would be protected as far as possible,[59] and, some years later, his private secretary, Francis Knollys, recalled that the Prime Minister William Gladstone had been involved indirectly "and successfully" behind the scenes.[60]

The Queen strongly disapproved of her son's (and daughter-in-law's) lifestyle, writing to her eldest daughter, the Crown Princess of Prussia, on 2 March 1870 that "they lead far too frivolous a life and are far too intimate with people - with a small set of not the best and wisest people who consider being fast the right thing".[61] She seemed especially concerned (with, as Lord Hattersley has put it, "admirable understanding of the moral superiority of the lower orders of society") that the affair could damage the Prince's reputation in the eyes of "the middle and lower classes".[62] However, Victoria seems to have been convinced of her son's innocence regarding Lady Mordaunt[63] and remained staunch in his defence, as did Alexandra, who described him to her sister-in-law Princess Louise as “my naughty little man”,[64] but was nonetheless deeply hurt by the affair.[65] For his part, Gladstone observed rather despairingly to his Colonial Secretary, Lord Granville, that "in rude and general terms, the Queen is invisible and the Prince of Wales is not respected".[66]

Attitudes to Lady Mordaunt's mental condition

Historians have taken differing stances on the extent of Lady Mordaunt’s mental illness. Diana Souhami (1996) reflected on Cockburn’s pre-trial observations that neither her “fragile virtue” nor “honour” were protected; that her “punishment” was to be declared insane; and that “it proved expedient to call her mad and bad”.[67] However, Michael Havers, a future Lord Chancellor who published in 1977 an account of the Prince’s involvement in the Tranby Croft baccarat scandal of 1890, commented that, by the time the Mordaunt case came up, Lady Mordaunt was “quite obviously insane” and that her physical condition had also deteriorated.[68]

In the 1960s, the historical biographer, Elizabeth Hamilton, whose husband, Sir Richard Hamilton, 9th baronet (1911–2001) inherited Walton Hall in 1961,[69] found a vast consignment of papers there that she used as the basis of a book about the scandal.[70] She took the view that Lady Mordaunt probably did fake her madness at first, but added that “if you feign insanity, it can become a habit, and you can genuinely go mad”.[71] Reviewing Lady Hamilton's book for the Sunday Telegraph, Nicola Shulman, Marchioness of Normanby, observed that "the sly unhindered crimes committed against Harriet Mordaunt make plain what rights a woman was owed in 1869".[72]

After the trial

Asylum at Chiswick

Records of the census of 1871 reveal that Lady Mordaunt was living on the western outskirts of London, at an asylum in Chiswick whose clinical director was Thomas Harrington Tuke. Tuke was, at the time, one of the most respected practitioners in lunacy and, together with the Prince of Wales' physician, William Gull, played a prominent role in the Mordaunt case;[73] his previous patients included the Chartist leader Feargus O’Connor,[74] the painter Sir Edwin Landseer and Sophy Gray, sister-in-law and muse of the painter John Everett Millais.[75] In evidence to the court, Tuke had been clear in his assertion that Lady Mordaunt was suffering from puerperal insanity, regarding her confessions of serial adultery with several men up to a few week's before the birth of her daughter as typical delusions associated with that condition.[76] However, he had a humane reputation and the régime at Chiswick was, by the standards of the day, very enlightened, with high staffing ratios and reasonable levels of freedom accorded to its patients.[77]

Divorce

There is very limited information available about Lady Mordaunt’s life between 1871 and her death in 1906. After various legal appeals, including to the House of Lords (in the judicial capacity that it exercised then), Sir Charles Mordaunt’s petition for divorce was remitted to the original court on the basis that Lady Mordaunt’s insanity was not, as a matter of law, a bar to proceedings. Eventually, in 1875, Sir Charles was granted a divorce on the grounds of his wife’s adultery with Lord Cole, who did not contest the action. In 1878 Sir Charles married Mary Louisa Cholmondeley, the daughter of a parson.

Final years

After 1879 Lady Mordaunt appears to have resided at an address in Sutton, Surrey. She was buried at Brompton Cemetery.

Violet Mordaunt

Lady Mordaunt’s daughter, Violet, lived at Moncreiffe after her mother's detention at Chiswick. Sir Charles appears to have taken no direct interest in her, although he did make provision for her maintenance as part of a wider settlement after his divorce that included also a sum towards Lady Mordaunt's care.[78] In 1890 Violet married Viscount Weymouth, later 5th Marquess of Bath. Neither her mother nor Sir Charles was present at the wedding and, despite his continual failure to acknowledge Violet, Sir Charles appears to have been offended by the Moncreiffes' decision not to invite him. However, there is some evidence that, at Christmas the previous year, Lady Mordaunt (by then referred to as "Miss Moncreiff") was allowed out of detention to meet her future son-in-law.[79]

Violet died in 1928. Her son Henry, the 6th Marquess,[80] described by Deborah, Duchess of Devonshire as "the handsomest man you ever saw",[81] was one of the "bright young people" of the 1920s[82] and became famous in the 1960s for developing a safari park on the family's estate at Longleat. In his entry for Who's Who, the 6th Marquess referred to his mother as the daughter of Sir Charles Mordaunt, but made no mention of Lady Mordaunt.[83] Violet was the grandmother of the present 7th Marquess who is known for his polyamorous relationships[84] and, according to Diana Mosley, was "the image" of the 5th Marquess.[85]

External links

References

  1. ^ http://thepeerage.com/p1358.htm#i13578
  2. ^ Some writers have referred to Lady Mordaunt as "Lady Harriet Mordaunt", a style that would be correct only if she had been the daughter of an earl, marquess or duke (which she was not, although her mother was).
  3. ^ "Of that Ilk" means "of that same place", i.e. it is a contraction of "Moncreiffe of Moncreiffe".
  4. ^ The original Moncreiffe House (1679) was destroyed by fire in 1957.
  5. ^ http://thepeerage.com/p1358.htm#i13578
  6. ^ Report of the Mordaunt case, Pall Mall Gazette, 11 March 1875; reprinted in New York Times, 24 March 1875.
  7. ^ Elizabeth Hamilton (1999) The Warwickshire Scandal. A caricature of Lord Dudley by Ape, published in Vanity Fair in June 1870, suggests that this was an apt description.
  8. ^ The Autobiography of Margot Asquith, Volume I (1920). Beginning with the Moncreiffes, Mrs. Asquith named several other beautiful groups and individuals, including the Conynghams, Lady Randolph Churchill, mother of Winston, and Lady de Grey, later Marchioness of Ripon. While observing that London society was "neither better nor worse" in 1920 than forty years earlier, she was unable to think "where all the beauty has gone to!"
  9. ^ Hamilton, op.cit.
  10. ^ Deborah Fisher (2005) Princesses of Wales
  11. ^ Georgina Battiscombe (1969) Queen Alexandra
  12. ^ E. F. Benson (1930) As We Were: A Victorian Peepshow
  13. ^ Hamilton, op.cit.
  14. ^ Obituary of Sir Richard Hamilton, Daily Telegraph, 3 October 2001
  15. ^ Hamilton, op.cit.
  16. ^ Christopher Hibbert (2000) Queen Victoria: A Personal History
  17. ^ Benny Green (comp., 1986) The Wisden Book of Obituaries; Sir Pelham Warner (1946) Lord's 1787-1945. H.J. was notable also for throwing a goal in the Eton Wall Game of 1885 (Wisden, loc.cit.) and was a member of the shooting party on which Viscount Drumlanrig, son of the Marquess of Queensbury, supposedly committed suicide in 1894 (a verdict doubted by Mordaunt as technically impossible) (Leo McKinstry (2005) Rosebery: Statesman in Turmoil).
  18. ^ Daily Telegraph, 3 October 2001
  19. ^ John Betjeman (1972) London's Historic Railway Stations
  20. ^ Roger Wilkes, "House of fun: Walton Hall, Warwickshire", Daily Telegraph, 16 January 2002
  21. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  22. ^ The Prince and Princess made their home at Marlborough House, London.
  23. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  24. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  25. ^ Diana Souhami (1996) Mrs Keppel and Her Daughter
  26. ^ Roy Jenkins (1995) Gladstone
  27. ^ http://thepeerage.com/p1197.htm#i11965
  28. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  29. ^ Daily Telegraph, 3 October 2001 & 16 January 2002; Elizabeth Hamilton (1999) The Warwickshire Scandal. Some writers, including Souhami and Michael Havers et al (1977) The Royal Baccarat Scandal, have referred to the baby as a boy and others merely to a child. In correspondence of 1869 relating to Violet's custody, she was referred to as "it": Hamilton, op.cit.
  30. ^ Souhami, op.cit.
  31. ^ Michael Havers, Edward Grayson & Peter Shankland (1977, revised 1988) The Royal Baccarat Scandal
  32. ^ http://victoriancalendar.blogspot.com/2011/02/february-25-1870-mordaunt-divorce.html
  33. ^ Havers et al, op.cit.
  34. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  35. ^ Battiscombe, op.cit.; Keith Middlemas (1975) Edward VII
  36. ^ Battiscombe, op.cit.
  37. ^ Souhami, op.cit
  38. ^ James Brough (1975) The Prince and the Lily. Only a few years after the Mordaunt affair, Lord Randolph Churchill threatened to make public imprudent letters that the Prince had written to the Countess of Aylesford if he did not use his influence to persuade her husband, the 7th Earl, to withdraw a divorce suit in which Lord Randolph's brother, the Marquess of Blandford, was named as co-respondent: Battiscombe, op.cit; Richard Toye (2007) Lloyd George and Churchill
  39. ^ Souhami, op.cit
  40. ^ Sarah Bradford (1982) Disraeli; Havers et al, op.cit.
  41. ^ Middlemas, op.cit.
  42. ^ Brough, op.cit.
  43. ^ For example, Edward VII: Prince of Pleasure (BBC2 TV, 2 April 2011)
  44. ^ Battiscombe, op.cit.
  45. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc.cit.
  46. ^ Souhami, op.cit.
  47. ^ Havers et al, op.cit.
  48. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc.cit.
  49. ^ Quoted in Battiscombe, op.cit.
  50. ^ See An Official Report of the Cause Célèbre: Mordaunt v. Mordaunt, Cole & Johnstone (Evans, Oliver & Co., 1870)
  51. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc.cit.
  52. ^ Battiscombe, op.cit.; Souhami, op.cit.
  53. ^ Quoted in Souhami, op. cit.
  54. ^ Souhami, op.cit.
  55. ^ Pall Mall Gazette, loc. cit.
  56. ^ Roy Hattersley (2004) The Edwardians. By way of comparison, during the Profumo Affair almost a century later, Mandy Rice-Davies famously remarked "He would, wouldn't he?" when it was put to her in court that Lord Astor had denied her allegations relating to house parties at Cliveden: Oxford Dictionary of Quotations (5th edition, 1999), 626:9.
  57. ^ Quoted in Souhami, op.cit.
  58. ^ Dorothy Thompson (1990) Queen Victoria: Gender & Power; Miranda Seymour, Sunday Times Culture, 6 November 2011 (reviewing Helen Rappaport (2011) Magnificent Obsession: Victoria, Albert And The Death That Changed the Monarchy). In 1867 Victoria had been booed and hissed on her way to open Parliament: Rappaport, op.cit..
  59. ^ Middlemass, op.cit; Souhami, op.cit.
  60. ^ Michael Havers, Edawrd Grayson & Peter Shankland (1977, revised 1988) The Royal Baccarat Scandal at page 253. Souhami, op.cit., attributes this observation to Knollys' father, Sir William Knollys, who was the Prince of Wales' comptroller (she says private secretary) at the time of the Mordaunt case. However, Francis Knollys appears to have reminded the Prince during the baccarat scandal of 1890 of the "indirect" and "successful" nature of Gladstone's involvement twenty years earlier: Havers, ibid..
  61. ^ Quoted in Battiscombe, op.cit.
  62. ^ Quoted in Hattersley (2004) The Edwardians
  63. ^ Lytton Strachey (1921) Queen Victoria
  64. ^ Letter to Princess Louise on her engagement to Lord Lorne, October 1870, quoted in Battiscombe, op.cit.; Souhami, op.cit.
  65. ^ Battiscombe, op.cit. When the Prince and Princess dined with the Prime Minister on the day that the Prince gave evidence in the Mordaunt case, Mrs. Gladstone's niece, Lady Lucy Cavendish, noted that "the Princess looked lovely, but very sad when she was not exerting herself": Diary of Lady Frederick Cavendish (ed. John Bailey, 1927), Volume II, page 80.
  66. ^ Quoted in A. N. Wilson (2003) The Victorians; Thompson, op.cit. Lord Granville became Foreign Secretary in July 1870 following the death of Lord Clarendon: Sir Llewellyn Woodward (1938) The Age of Reform 1815-1870.
  67. ^ Souhami, op.cit.
  68. ^ Havers et al, op.cit. Lord Havers was briefly Lord Chancellor in 1987.
  69. ^ Sir Charles Mordaunt's will had provided for Walton Hall to pass to the eldest son of his second wife's daughter. The entertainer Danny La Rue turned it into a show-business venue in the 1970s, but made a substantial loss when the enterprise failed in 1983: Daily Telegraph, 3 October 2001.
  70. ^ Elizabeth Hamilton (1999) The Warwickshire Scandal
  71. ^ Daily Telegraph, 16 January 2002
  72. ^ Quoted in Pan edition of The Warwickshire Scandal (2000). Shulman added that she hoped it was not "another crime to have relished the story as much as I did".
  73. ^ Obituary of Thomas Harrington Tuke, British Medical Journal, 28 June 1888
  74. ^ BMJ, 28 June 1888
  75. ^ Suzanne Fagence Cooper (2010) The Model Wife
  76. ^ Elizabeth Hamilton (1999) The Warwickshire Scandal
  77. ^ Keith Poulton, Brentford & Chiswick Local History Journal 1 (1980)
  78. ^ Elizabeth Hamilton (1999) The Warwickshire Scandal
  79. ^ Elizabeth Hamilton, op.cit.
  80. ^ An elder son, James, was killed in the First World War.
  81. ^ Deborah Devonshire (2010) Wait for Me!
  82. ^ D. J. Taylor (2007) Bright Young People: The Rise and Fall of a Generation 1918-1940. Emphasising a streak of unconventionality in the family, a biographer of the Mitford sisters, of whom "Debo" Devonshire was the youngest, has referred to Henry (a casual friend also of Nancy Mitford) as having been "on the fringe of a Bohemian group at Oxford": Mary S. Lovell (2001) The Mitford Girls.
  83. ^ Who's Who, annually to 1992
  84. ^ In 2011 the London Times reported that police had been called to Longleat to deal with the consequences of a dispute between two of Lord Bath's "wifelets" as to which of them should sleep with him: Times, 11 June 2011. One of those involved was quoted as having told Lord Bath, who was then 79, "I've had enough of being a wifelet; now I'm looking for a hublet": Mail on Sunday Review, 3 July 2011.
  85. ^ Letter to Nancy Mitford, 29 July 1966: The Mitfords: Letters Between Six Sisters (ed. Charlotte Mosley, 2007). In the same letter, Lady Mosley referred to the opinion of her husband, Sir Oswald, that the 7th Marquess, then Viscount Weymouth. was "the exact double of the Ld Weymouth [Violet's eldest son and brother of Henry, the 6th Marquess] whom he saw killed near him in the first war" (ibid.)

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