Black Diamonds (68 page)

Read Black Diamonds Online

Authors: Catherine Bailey

Tags: #History, #England/Great Britain, #Nonfiction, #Royalty, #Politics & Government, #18th Century, #19th Century, #20th Century

BOOK: Black Diamonds
10.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

CHAPTER THREE

p. 14 ‘
a spurious child
…’: Thomas Bayliss, King’s Bench Division, Royal Courts of Justice, 10 March 1902. Case name: ‘Re a Solicitor – Ex parte The Incorporated Law Society’.
‘The Home Secretary was required to attend …’: a custom established after the ‘warming pan’ incident of 1688, when Mary of Modena, second wife of James II, was accused of smuggling a changeling into the bedchamber as heir to the throne.
p. 15 ‘
Lord Milton, their elder brother
…’: Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, Wentworth Woodhouse Muniments, Box 236.
‘Billy’s birth certificate …’: ibid.
p. 16 ‘
Certain members of the family
…’: Thomas Bayliss, King’s Bench Division, Royal Courts of Justice, 10 March 1902, Case name ‘Re a Solicitor – Ex parte The Incorporated Law Society’.
‘“Gentlemen”, wrote …’: Dr Millar to Messrs Walters and Co., 9 New Square, Lincoln’s Inn, 7 March 1901, Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, WWM, Box 236.
p. 17 ‘
Hannah Boyce’s statement
…’: ibid.
p. 18 ‘
1872 July 26 – the first cry
…’: ibid.
‘Among Billy’s documents …’: letter from Hannah Boyce to Mr Barker, 30 January 1901, ibid.
p. 19 ‘
Dear Lady Countess Fitzwilliam
…’: Hannah Boyce to Maud, Countess Fitzwilliam, 26 February 1913, ibid.
‘Lady Fitzwilliam has received the enclosed …’: Billy to Mr Barker, 9 March 1913, ibid.
‘On 10 March 1902 …’:
Yorkshire Post
, 11 March 1902, ‘Earl Fitzwilliam’s identity – strange allegations by a solicitor’.
p. 20 ‘
There had been a serious falling-out
…’: ibid.
‘In lieu of the questions submitted …’ Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, WWM, Box 236.
p. 21 ‘
You cannot be surprised
…’:
Daily Telegraph
, 11 March 1902.
p. 22 ‘
As vouched for
…’: Fitzwilliam v Fitzwilliam, Royal Courts of Justice, February 1951.

CHAPTER FOUR

p. 23 ‘
One of the hard lessons
…’: letter from Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to her daughter Lady Frances Doyne, 17 January 1877. Private Collection.
p. 24 ‘
My grandfather never spoke about his father
…’: author’s interview with Lady Barbara Ricardo, February 2004.
‘I couldn’t believe there was so little …’: Michael Shaw Bond,
Way Out West: On the Trail of an Errant Ancestor
, McClelland & Stewart, 2001, p. 12.
‘I imagined …’: ibid.
‘Searching through …’: ibid., p. 14.
p. 25 ‘
Fits are treated as madness
…’: G. Battiscombe,
Shaftesbury
, Constable, 1974, p. 259.
‘When Christ healed …’: G. E. Berrios and Roy Porter,
A History of Clinical Psychiatry
, Athlone, 1995, p. 165.
‘In the first century …’: ibid., p. 166.
p. 26 ‘
Dr Beau, who conducted a study of sixty-seven epileptics
…’: Owsei Temkin,
The Falling Sickness
, The Johns Hopkins Press, 1971, p. 262.
‘Even as late as the 1880s …’: Berrios and Porter,
A History of Clinical Psychiatry
, p. 170.
p. 27 ‘
William may have to
…’: cited in Bond,
Way Out West
, p. 14.
‘Please do let me know …’: ibid., p. 13.
‘I see no prospect …’: ibid., p. 22.
‘This Asylum for the Insane …’: cited in W. Parry Jones,
The Trade in Lunacy
, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1972, p. 106.
p. 28 ‘
Modelled on grand country houses
…’: Andrew Scull,
The Most Solitary of Afflictions: Madness and Society in Britain 1700–1900
, Yale University Press, 1993, pp. 300–301.
‘It is painful …’: J. Conolly on the 9th Report of Commissioner for Lunacy, 1854, cited in Parry Jones,
The Trade in Lunacy
, p. 180.
‘At Ticehurst …’: Charlotte MacKenzie,
Psychiatry for the Rich
, Routledge, 1992, p. 105.
‘In 1857, lifting the veil of secrecy …’: Crichton Royal Asylum, 18th Annual Report, 1857, quoted in Scull,
The Most Solitary of Afflictions
, p. 298.
p. 29 ‘
They are encountered
…’: ibid.
‘I am sorry to say …’: cited in Bond,
Way Out West
, p. 14.
‘William, I am happy …’: ibid.
‘I hope the ups …’: ibid., p. 21.
p. 30 ‘
Dear Father and Mother
…’: Milton to Lord and Lady Fitzwilliam, April 1872. Private Collection.
‘It is almost impossible …’:
The World
, 5 March 1902.
‘silent of hosts …’: unpublished memoir, cited with the kind permission of David Peake.
‘A good many of them were frightened of him …’: Lady Mabel Smith, Royal Courts of Justice, Fitzwilliam v Fitzwilliam, February 1951.
p. 31 ‘
Maurice fell
…’: cited in McKenzie,
Psychiatry for the Rich
, p. 101.
p. 32 ‘
3 roasted oxen
…’: quoted in Bond,
Way Out West
, p. 28.
p. 33 ‘
I have been thinking
…’: Henry Wentworth-Fitzwilliam to his sister Frances Doyne, July 1860. Private Collection.
p. 34 ‘
There appears some reason
…’: Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to George Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, April 1861, Northampton Archives.
‘My son’s conduct …’ Earl Fitzwilliam to Lord Chichester, April 1861, cited in Bond,
Way Out West
, p. 24.
‘He wishes you to read …’: Countess Fitzwilliam to George Fitzwilliam, April 1861, Northampton Archives.

CHAPTER FIVE

p. 36 ‘
With respect to the charge
…’:
The Standard
, 10 May 1862.
‘The diamond earrings …’: ibid., 3 May 1862.
‘He offered the broker …’: ibid.
p. 37 ‘
His lawyers
…’: ibid.
‘Sailed at 5 …’:
Cheadle’s Journal of the Trip Across Canada 1862– 1863
, Graphic Publishers, Ottawa, 1931, p. 15.
‘I am sorry I did not look up …’: Milton to Henry Went worth-Fitzwilliam, 20 June 1862. Private Collection.
p. 38 ‘
Weather blowing stormy
…’:
Cheadle’s Journal of the Trip Across Canada 1862–1863
, p. 16.
‘Turned out towards 11 …’: ibid.
‘About 1 o’clock …’: ibid. P.19.
p. 39 ‘
Very cold and raw
…’: ibid., p. 20.
‘When starving …’: Robert Ballantyne,
Hudson Bay Company
, Boston, Phillips, Sampson, 1859.
p. 40 ‘
Their journey
…’: Viscount Milton and W. B. Cheadle,
The North-West Passage by Land
, London, Cassel, Petter and Galpin, 1865.
‘He was leaning …’: ibid., p. 9.
p. 41 ‘
So long as
…’: quoted in Bond,
Way Out West
, p. 224.

CHAPTER SIX

p. 42 ‘
Poor squinny
…’:
The Diary of Lady Frederick-Cavendish
, ed. J. Bailey, London, 1927, vol. 2.
‘The Fitzwilliams and the Devonshires …’: David Cannadine,
The Decline and Fall of the British Aristocracy
, Yale University Press, 1990, p. 10.
‘In the course of …’:
The Diary of Lady Frederick-Cavendish
, vol. 2, p. 19.
‘I am worried …’: ibid.
p. 43 ‘
It is no light thing
…’: Mary Butler to Lady Frances Doyne, 1 June 1867. Private Collection.
p. 44 ‘
When I knew
…’: Mary Butler to Lady Frances Doyne, 13 June 1867. Private Collection.
‘It was very kind of you …’: ibid.
‘Will you thank …’: ibid.
‘You may be certain …’: Mary Butler to Lady Frances Doyne, 8 July 1867. Private Collection.
p. 45 ‘
Dearest Fanny
…’: Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to Lady Frances Doyne, 5 July 1867. Private Collection.
‘I never knew her …’: conversation with Elfrida, Countess of Wharncliffe, recorded by Roy Young in 1977.
p. 46 ‘
Admitting defeat
…’: Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to Lady Frances Doyne, 9 August 1867. Private Collection.
‘The late Lady Milton …’: statement sworn before the Commissioner of Oaths, 1900, Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, Wentworth Woodhouse Muniments, Box 236.
p. 47 ‘
On Tuesday
…’: Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to Lady Frances Doyne, 28 December 1871. Private Collection.
p. 48 ‘
The voyage
…’: Lord Milton to Lord and Lady Fitzwilliam, April 1872. Private Collection.
‘25th May …’: Matilda Kingdon, unpublished diary. Private Collection.
p. 49 ‘
the half-breeds came
…’: ibid.
p. 50 ‘
Re-reading Dr Millar’s statement
…’: Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, WWM, Box 236.
‘My intercourse …’: ibid.

CHAPTER SEVEN

p. 53 ‘
“Yes,” it read
…’: undated. Henry Wentworth-Fitzwilliam papers. Private Collection.
p. 55 ‘
In 1900, they were short of proof
…’: November 1900, ‘Lord Milton Supplemental Instructions to Mr Butcher, Walters & Co.’ Sheffield Archives, Unlisted Material, Wentworth Woodhouse Muniments, Box 236.
‘From a young age …’: Henry Wentworth-Fitzwilliam to Lady Frances Doyne, July 1860. Private Collection.
‘Only those …’: Laura, Viscountess Milton, to Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, n.d. Private Collection.
p. 56 ‘
In a sanctimonious letter
…’: Harriet, Countess Fitzwilliam, to Henry Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 22 February 1874. Private Collection.
‘I fear that dear William …’: Henry Wentworth-Fitzwilliam to Lady Frances Doyne, 14 January 1877. Private Collection.
‘There was little …’: cited in
Way Out West: The Story of an Errant Ancestor
, McClelland & Stewart, Toronto, 2001, p. 235.
p. 57 ‘
As Michael Bond
…’: ibid.

Other books

Broken Glass by Alain Mabanckou
On Black Wings by Storm, Sylvia
The Wedding Quilt by Jennifer Chiaverini
Teatro Grottesco by Thomas Ligotti
Dead Heat by Caroline Carver
On the Edge by Pamela Britton