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Lyonel Tollemache

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Name
  
Lyonel Tollemache

Parents
  
Ralph Tollemache


Lyonel Tollemache

Full Name
  
Lyonel Felix Carteret Eugene Tollemache

Born
  
15 January 1854 (
1854-01-15
)
Grantham

Title
  
4th Baronet of Hanby Hall

Spouse(s)
  
Hersilia Henrietta Diana Oliphant Collingwood (m. 1881)

Children
  
Cecil Lyonel Newcomen Tollemache, 5th Baronet

Died
  
March 4, 1952, Ham, London, Richmond, United Kingdom

Predecessor
  
William Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart

Alma mater
  
Jesus College, Cambridge

Sir Lyonel Felix Carteret Eugene Tollemache, 4th Baronet (15 January 1854 – 4 March 1952) was an English landowner.

Contents

Early life and family

Born in South Witham near Grantham, Lincolnshire, Lyonel was the eldest son of Reverend Ralph Tollemache and his first wife and cousin, Caroline Tollemache. Ralph was noted for the increasingly eccentric names given to his numerous offspring.

Lyonel graduated from Jesus College, Cambridge. He married Hersilia Henrietta Diana Oliphant (or Collingwood) in 1881 and they had three daughters and three sons, all born in Eastbourne;

  • Cecil Lyonel Newcomen Tollemache, 5th Baronet (4 March 1886 – 31 March 1969)
  • Beryl Hersilia Tollemache (1887–8 June 1944)
  • Cynthia Joan Caroline Tollemache (1890–31 January 1988)
  • Lieutenant John Eadred Tollemache (28 July 1892 – 21 August 1916) B.A. Magdalen College, Cambridge. Joined the 6th Battalion The Queen's (Royal West Surrey Regiment) and died whilst attached to the 8th Battalion in the Somme.
  • Sibell Agnes Tollemache (1895–7 June 1954)
  • Maj.-Gen. Sir Humphrey Thomas Tollemache, 6th Baronet (10 August 1897 – 1990)
  • Baronetage

    On the death of his second cousin, William Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart, 3rd Baronet Lyonel succeeded to the Baronetage in 1935 at the age of 81. He inherited Dysarts' holding in Buckminster estate and the entirety of Ham House with the surrounding land and property in Petersham, Ham and Canbury and the gravel works at Ham. Lyonel and his middle-aged bachelor son, Cecil, moved into Ham House. The Dysart title and other estates were passed to Dysart's niece, Wenefryde Scott.

    World War II

    The father and son duo increasingly struggled to maintain Ham House, especially as the outbreak of war reduced the availability of labour. The nearby Leyland military vehicle and munitions factory was a local target and bombs fell near the house. Tollemache moved most of the valuable furniture and art works from the house to the country for safe keeping. The family deeds and papers, some dating back to the 14th-century, were placed in deep vaults in Chancery Lane. Although they survived the Blitz, they were damaged by flooding from fire-hoses and were thought to have been destroyed. Many were recovered from the Ham House Stables in 1953 and transferred to The National Archives.

    Post-war

    After the war, in 1948, Lyonel and his son donated Ham House and its gardens to the National Trust, a plan that had been under consideration since James Lees-Milne's visit in March 1943. Lyonel and his son moved to Langham House on Ham Common, one of the many Tollemache properties in the area. In 1949, Buckminster Estates Ltd, the Tollemache's company established in 1936, sold the remaining Tollemache interests in the area by auction in 124 lots comprising 350 acres (140 ha) land, 41 residences, 99 cottages, a farm, 4 shops, 2 licensed premises, freehold ground rents and building plots and the sand and gravel works. Lyonel remained in Langham House, Ham until his death in 1952. Hersilia died in 1953. The baronetage passed to Cecil, and, on his death, to youngest son, Humphrey. He is buried at St Peter's Church, Petersham.

    References

    Lyonel Tollemache Wikipedia