Thursday, 12 June 2025

Katharine Carnegie, Viscountess Tredegar: 1867-1949

 



A Short Tribute to Katharine Carnegie                      

      Viscountess Tredegar : 1867-1949                                     

                                By William Cross, FSA Scot 

In 1913, on the death of Godfrey, the 2nd Lord Tredegar,  his nephew,   Courtenay Morgan, succeeded to the title.  Godfrey  never married  and an assorted mix of his  sisters and their daughters acted as hostesses at Tredegar House. 

On  Courtenay's succession,  his  marriage of  thirteen years  to  Lady Katharine Carnegie was in difficulty.  Katharine hated Wales and Courtenay.  All attempts made  of them  trying to live together had failed.

Newport had not seen a Lady Tredegar since the death of the first baroness,  Lady Rosamond Mundy,  almost thirty years before,  in 1883.

Courtenay was obliged  to play for time to explain  the absence of Katharine from his side.

However he persuaded the local newspaper, the "South Wales Argus" , to publish a sketch of Katharine, as below, dated 1907.



                                     Katharine in 1907

The Daily Mail  of 22 November, 1913 recorded:

“Lord Tredegar announced at Newport yesterday that Lady Tredegar’s doctor would not allow her to take part in any public functions at present”.

Katharine  absence from Courtenay’s side,   Tredegar House and Wales  remained   perpetual. 

It was all different in 1890 when  Major Courtenay Morgan married Lady Katharine Agnes Blanche Carnegie in the library of Kinnaird Castle in Scotland. 


                                     Kinnaird Castle
                               The seat of the Carnegies

Everyone expected a happy marriage, but it was never happy,  Katharine and Courtenay were not suited and dysfunctional.

But they had two children, a son, Evan born 1893 and a daughter, Gwyneth, born 1895.

As 1913  finally  closed the whole of Courtenay’s family, Katharine, son Evan and daughter Gwyneth were in London for Christmas and New Year.   A fire at Tredegar House had caused damage to several bedrooms in the servant’s quarters forced Courtenay’s return to Wales.[1]


                            Tredegar House, Newport

In January 1915, Katharine roped  Gwyneth ( in her second year as a debutante )  into acting as a companion at a matinee held at the Alhambra Theatre  in aid of Grand Duke Michael’s  Fund for sending comforts to the British soldiers in France.[2]


    

                                                       Gwyneth Morgan                                 

An adjoining report records “   Although at present in London, and very much an invalid, Lady Tredegar takes a keen interest in the various movements in Wales which have been set on foot either for supplying the needs of Welsh regiments or assisting local distress.” [3]

A poor sleeper, susceptible to noise and uncomfortable in London’s  war time  chaos, Katharine was house  hunting – she bought a refuge,   Honeywood House,  that later  this became her main home, at Rowhook, near  Dorking.

During the war period, and despite her  health being wobbly she tried hard to keep a presence in London  during the summer months. 


                                          Honeywood House, Rowhook

In the early months of being Lord and Lady Tredegar  they took a lease on St Dunstan’s Lodge, Regents Park.[4] It proved impossible for Katharine  to continue living at the spacious  Lodge,  with its ample grounds, because “ roarings from the Zoo [ London Zoo] woke Lady Tredegar....” every morning. [5]  Perhaps it was more to do with  Courtenay’s pawings than the creatures over the wall.[6]

At the outbreak of the Great War, Courtenay offered his steam yacht Liberty to the War Office, this was accepted, the ship was revamped as a hospital ship ( at Courtenay’s own expense) and he went off to sail in her – seeing early action in the North Sea.


SS Liberty

Katharine was unwell but keen to contribute something useful too. She wrote a letter  expressing her great regret that her health would not allow her to take an active part in the good work which the various branches of the Red Cross Society were  doing in Monmouthshire, and informing the Society that she would send a cheque for £100 to the Bassaleg St Basil’s Working Guild Red Cross Committee aid of the County’s Central Red Cross Society.[7]

While  Britain was still at war  Katharine  continued to support the war effort in several ways. She gave up her home at Bryanston Square as a war hospital for the  Royal Flying Corps, writing cheques to fund its upkeep.

In the summer of 1917 her  efforts were recognised by the Prime Minister David Lloyd George and his wife  who invited Katharine to 10 Downing Street for a visit there by Princess Mary ( only daughter of  the King and  Queen). Katharine took Evan with her “ as fetcher and carrier for the Princess”. [8] The event was a concert of  Welsh music, much enjoyed by all and proved  a successful fund raiser.

                                        Evan Morgan

One report says “ [ The Princess ] was sitting in her favourite pink and white, between Mrs Lloyd George and Lady Tredegar ....”[9]

                            Katharine by Augustus John

Welsh artist, Augustus John informed London and Wales of Katharine’s looks and fashions when he painted her and  subsequently  displayed his  “Lady Tredegar”  in an exhibition at the Alpine Club, along with a portrait of Lady Cynthia Asquith and   an early versions of his series  “Tinkers” ( on Gipsies)  that   John ranked amongst his  own best work of the period.[10]  Katharine was also painted by Ambrose McEvoy  and exhibited at in the year that followed.[11]  

                             Katharine by Ambrose McEvoy


An anonymous ‘ Portrait of a Young Man ‘ in the  same exhibition was of Evan Morgan.[12]



                            Evan Morgan By Augustus John


Katharine also facilitated a  war time charity appeals  for the Royal Flying Corps  - one of these in March 1918  was a  matinee concert   at the Coliseum[13] and a month later by staging a vocal  recital by Boris Lensky  at her home at 45 Grosvenor Square on Saturday  13 April, 1918. [14]

Katharine’s patronage of the arts and young up and coming artists was another passion of hers through the early 1920s including  Wyndham Lewis is  reflected in her appearances at galleries and exhibitions.[15]    Two years before she was among those who supported an exhibition of American  contemporary art at the Grafton Gallaries. It was during this time that Katharine gained a lady’s companion,  Miss Mackenzie.[16]

There was always a need for a new hat. Katharine was among a number of Society women to  have   Nellie Romilly, a family connection by marriage,  supplied  the said head ware.

In 1926, the year that Courtenay became a Viscount and Katharine Viscountess Tredegar she remained active in artistic circles with a a pledge of support by Viscountess Tredegar  for the ‘Chelsea Opera Week’ in November.[17]

But Katharine was at times adrift from reality. It had not helped her well bring that her daughter Gwyneth had died in mysterious circumstances  between December 1924 and May 1925, and a body ( identified as Gwyneth) had been dragged out of the River Thames. 

TO BE CONTINUED


EXTRACT FROM THE DRAFT OF A BOOK " THE FIVE LADY TREDEGARS"  BY WILLIAM CROSS, FSA SCOT


FOR MORE INFORMATION  E-MAIL WILL CROSS

williecross@aol.com


[1] Daily Mail, 26 December 1913

[2] Western Mail, 22 January 1915.

[3] Ibid.

[4] The Exeter and Plymouth Gazette for 24 July, 1923 records “ Lord and Lady Tredegar have taken St Dunstan’s Lodge, Regent’s Park for a short term.”

[5] Manchester Evening News, 29 March,  1915. According to this report  the house was sold by Lord Tredegar to Lord Londesborough, who entertained the Kaiser and Kaiserin. In 1915 the house was owned by Mr Otto Kahn.

[6] The Morgan townhouse in London of 39 Portman Place was put to the market to meet the death duties from Godfrey’s estate.  In 1914  the Tredegars took a lease on Lady Millar’s house at 45 Grosvenor Square.

[7] Western Mail, 18 August 1914.

[8]  Daily Mirror, 27 June, 1917.

[9]  Ibid..

[10] Daily Mirror, 26 November, 1917.

[11] Daily Mirror 11 May 1918.

[12] Daily Mirror 14 February 1918

[13]  Daily Mirror 18 March, 1918.

[14] Reviewed in The Telegraph for 15 April,   1918.

[15]    The Times of 23 April, 1921 records Katharine attending Wyndham’s Lewis’ ‘ Tyros and Portraits’ at the Leicester Galleries. Other named as attending include Lady Cunard , Mr Asquith and Sir Carl and Lady Meyer.

[16]  Daily Telegraph, 14 March 1921.

[17] Daily Telegraph  11 November , 1926.


Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Remembering Robin Bryans / Robert Harbinson : 1928-2005

 Remembering Robin Bryans / Robert Harbinson : 1928-2005



Robin Bryans : Ulsterman and Author

A kindly thought today, twenty years since the passing of this controversial author, on the 11 June 2005.

He was an Ulsterman, a poet, travel writer and a thorn in the Establishment’s side.

The extraordinary legacy of this complex and often sadly twisted man, the creator of four scandal ringing volumes of autobiography, often referred to as the 'Conspiracy Theorists Bible', although rambling, is quite a marvel.

Despite the repeated tirades of “ I Accuse” his writings offer a mostly coherent account of his often bohemian life and times and ranks as a compelling black monument to the upper crust, and the seedier side of many well known politicians, publishers, judges, and lawyers of the mid late 20th century.

Fantasist, maybe, but I more than just fancy there are grains of wheat to be found within the chaff, my many years of researches into Bryans various claims proved a perpetual minefield.

Bryans published as Robin Bryans four  remarkable memoirs under the Honeyford Press imprint: The dust has never settled (1992); Let the petals fall (1993), resembling a sequel to a book called  The protégé  from the 1960s, with many digressions. There was also Checkmate: the memories of a political prisoner (1994); and Blackmail and whitewash (1996).

I am indebted to Bryans without whom I could not have written my biographies of Evan Morgan, Viscount Tredegar, in particular " Not Behind Lace Curtains" : The Hidden World of Evan, Viscount Tredegar " ( 2013).

A well written, considerate, and longer narrative on Bryans can be found in the Dictionary of Irish Biography