Philip James Stanhope, 1st Baron Weardale (8 December 1847 – 1 March 1923), was a British Liberal Party politician and philanthropist.
Background and early life
editStanhope was born in Marylebone, London.[citation needed] A member of an important political family, he was the younger son of Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl Stanhope, and Emily Harriet Kerrison, daughter of General Sir Edward Kerrison, 1st Baronet. Arthur Stanhope, 6th Earl Stanhope, and Edward Stanhope were his elder brothers (in contrast to him they were both Conservative Party politicians).[1] Having joined the Royal Navy as a young man, he rose to the rank of lieutenant before he left the service.[2]
Political career
editIn 1886 Stanhope was elected to the House of Commons as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Wednesbury. Having lost his seat in 1892,[3] he was elected again in 1893 for Burnley, a seat he held until 1900.[4] Defeated again, he was elected in 1904 for Harborough, a seat he held until 1906,[5] when he was elevated to the peerage as Baron Weardale, of Stanhope in the County of Durham.[6]
A prominent opponent of war – including the Boer War – he was president of the sixth National Peace Conference in Leicester in 1910, led the British group in the Inter-Parliamentary Union, and became president of that organisation from 1912 to 1922. He was also president of the Save the Children Fund and a trustee of the National Portrait Gallery.[2]
With Lord Curzon, he became in 1912 joint president of the National League for Opposing Woman Suffrage, an anti-suffrage organisation. In 1914 he was attacked with a dogwhip at Euston Station by a suffragette who mistook him for the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith.[2]
Personal life
editLord Weardale married Countess Alexandra Tolstoy (1856–1934), granddaughter of the German-born Russian Count Georg von Cancrin and widow of Count Tolstoy, a relative of the writer Leo Tolstoy, in 1877.[2] They lived at The Wodehouse near Wombourne, where they entertained William Ewart Gladstone.[7]
In 1906, he built Weardale Manor, a country house on Toys Hill, Brasted Chart, near Sevenoaks in Kent. A substantial house – 145 rooms – it was only occupied during the summer months. He died in Sevenoaks in March 1923, aged 75, and was buried at Chevening. As he had no children the barony became extinct on his death. After his death, Lady Weardale rarely visited Weardale Manor. On her death in 1934, she left it to her nephew, Lord Stanhope. Lacking the funds to maintain it, he allowed it to fall into disrepair and it was demolished in 1939,[8] as were many country houses at that time.
Arms
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Further reading
edit- Private papers of Lord and Lady Weardale are held at the Centre for Kentish Studies of the Kent Archives Service.
- There are some papers of Lord Weardale in the Save the Children archives.
References
edit- ^ thepeerage.com Philip James Stanhope, 1st Baron Weardale of Stanhope
- ^ a b c d 'Death of Lord Weardale. Philanthropist And Politician', The Times, 2 March 1923.
- ^ leighrayment.com House of Commons: Waterloo to West Looe[usurped]
- ^ leighrayment.com House of Commons: Bristol to Buteshire and Caithness[usurped]
- ^ leighrayment.com House of Commons: Hackney to Harwich[usurped]
- ^ "No. 27874". The London Gazette. 12 January 1906. p. 270.
- ^ Review by Eugenio F. Biagini of Gladstone: Heroic Minister, 1865-1898. Professor R. T. Shannon. London: Allen Lane, 1999, xvii 702 pp.
- ^ Kev Reynolds, Walking in Kent (Cicerone Press Limited, 2007), p. 51.
- ^ A genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the peerage and baronetage, the Privy Council, knightage and companionage. London: Harrison & Sons. 1915. p. 1847.