William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp
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Lord Beauchamp as Governor of New South Wales in 1899 |
William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp KG,
KCMG,
PC, (
February 20,
1872 –
November 15,
1938),
British politician, succeeded his father as
Earl Beauchamp in
1891, and was mayor of
Worcester at age 23. A progressive in his ideas, he was surprised to be offered the post of
Governor of New South Wales in May
1899. Though good at the job, he was unpopular in the colony, and Beauchamp returned to Britain in
1900, where he joined the
Liberal Party.
On
July 26,
1902, he married Lady Lettice Mary Elizabeth Grosvenor, granddaughter of the
1st Duke of Westminster. They had three sons and four daughters between 1903 and 1916.
Beauchamp was
Lord Steward of the Household to King
Edward VII and was made a
Privy Counsellor in 1906. He served in the Liberal Government as
Lord President of the Council from June to November 1910,
First Commissioner of Works from 1910 to 1914, Lord President again from 1914 to 1915, and was Liberal Leader in the
House of Lords from 1924, supporting the failing party with his substantial fortune.
Beauchamp was made
Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire in 1911, carried the
Sword of State at the coronation of King
George V, was made
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1913 and a
Knight of the Garter in 1914.
He was also Chancellor of
London University, a
Six Master (Governor of RGS Worcester) and Captain of the
Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms.
In 1931, he was "outed" as
homosexual (despite his 7 children) to the
King and
Queen by his violently
Tory brother-in-law, the
Duke of Westminster, who hoped to ruin the Liberal Party through Beauchamp. Homosexuality was a criminal offence at the time, and the King was horrified, saying "I thought men like that shot themselves".
There was no public scandal, but Lord Beauchamp resigned all his offices, except the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports, and went into exile on the Continent. He died of cancer in
New York City, aged 66.
Lord Beauchamp is generally supposed to have been the model for
Lord Marchmain in
Evelyn Waugh's novel,
Brideshead Revisited.