Harriet Windsor-Clive, 13th Baroness Windsor (30 July 1797 – 9 November 1869[1]), was a landowner and wealthy benefactor in the Penarth and Cardiff area of South Wales. She is probably best known for developing Penarth Dock in competition with the Marquess of Bute's docks in Cardiff and for her charitable donations in the area.
Harriet Windsor-Clive | |
---|---|
The Baroness Windsor | |
Predecessor | Other Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth |
Successor | Robert Windsor-Clive, The Lord Windsor |
Born | London | 30 July 1797
Died | 9 November 1869 St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex | (aged 72)
Buried | 16 November 1869 Bromfield, Shropshire |
Spouse(s) | Hon. Robert Clive MP |
Father | Other Windsor, 5th Earl of Plymouth |
Mother | Hon. Sarah Windsor (née Archer) |
After the death of her brother, the 6th Earl of Plymouth, in 1833, the subsidiary title of the earldom, Baron Windsor, fell in abeyance. After the death of her elder sister in 1855, the abeyance was terminated in her favour and she became The Baroness Windsor.[1]
Background
editHarriet Windsor was born on 30 July 1797 in London,[1] the third child and second daughter of Other Windsor, 5th Earl of Plymouth.[2] In 1819 she married Robert Henry Clive (1789–1854), a Member of Parliament for Ludlow, Shropshire. She legally changed her name to Harriet Windsor-Clive in November 1855.[1]
After the sudden death of their brother in 1833,[2] Harriet and her sister Maria (who was the wife of the 3rd Marquess of Downshire), became co-heiresses of their father's estate, known as the Plymouth Estate. It covered the land in Glamorgan on which the town of Penarth and the Cardiff suburb of Grangetown are now built. It also included St Fagans Castle, the family's seat in the area.[3] With Harriet being the favourite sister, the bulk of the Plymouth Estate was left to her, including Hewell Grange in Worcestershire and St Fagans Castle. Previously living in Essex, Harriet moved to Cardiff while the St Fagans property was restored. When the restoration was complete, they lived at Hewell Grange but visited St Fagans frequently.[4]
Business interests
editPenarth Dock
editIn 1855, Baroness Windsor formed the Penarth Harbour Company to develop a dock for Penarth on her land. She intended to compete with the new Cardiff Docks,[3][5] which were being developed by the 2nd and 3rd Marquess of Bute. The docks, curving between Penarth Head and the River Ely, were completed by 1865. Baroness Windsor was due to perform the opening ceremony on 10 June 1865, but failed to turn up in time to meet the high tide. The chairman of the Taff Vale Railway (who were lessees of the dock) made the baroness's excuses and performed the ceremony.[5] Baroness Windsor petitioned (unsuccessfully) against the Bute Dock bills,[3] but the Penarth Docks were a success all the same exporting 900,000 tons of coal a year by 1870.[5]
Grangetown
editIn 1857 the Baroness obtained an Act to enable her to develop her lands on the Cardiff side of the River Ely. The new housing development was to be called The Grange,[6] and is now known as Grangetown. One of the earliest pubs, operating from the 1860s until 2008 on Penarth Road, was called The Baroness Windsor.[7]
Philanthropy
editOn her death, Baroness Windsor was praised her as "simple and unostentatious in her manner" and generous towards charitable causes, The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian saying "In every movement which tended to the well-being of those around her, her large subscriptions expressed her sympathy with them".[8]
She paid for the construction of the Church of St Fagan, Trecynon, near Aberdare (1852–1853), then, when it burnt down in 1856, paid for its construction a second time.[9][10] She contributed towards the restoration of a number of churches in the Cardiff area, including St Mary's Church at St Fagans, Radyr's St John the Baptist and the Cathedral at Llandaff.[11] The national schools at Aberdare and Penarth were also financed from her purse.[11] Shortly before her death she financed the building of St Philip's Church in Webheath, Redditch, including the three-lighted stained glass above the altar, however she died before its consecration in February 1870.[12]
Family
editWith her husband Robert Clive (1789–1854), she had at least eight children, among them Robert Windsor-Clive, who predeceased her in 1859, and whose son Robert inherited the Windsor barony and was created Earl of Plymouth in 1905, and George Windsor-Clive, a Royal Navy officer and politician.
Death
editHarriett Windsor-Clive died in St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, on 9 November 1869, having been ill for a few months.[11] With her eldest son having died earlier, her estate was passed to her infant grandson, Robert Windsor-Clive,[3] who became The Baron Windsor and later the 1st Earl of Plymouth when the title was revived in 1905.
She was buried on 16 November at the church of Bromfield, Shropshire, in a vault with her late husband and son. Shops were closed for part of the day in Bromsgrove, Ludlow and Redditch.[13]
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Harriet Windsor, Baroness Windsor". ThePeerage.com. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ a b "Other Hickman Windsor, 5th Earl of Plymouth". ThePeerage.com. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ a b c d "About Baroness Windsor". UK Parliament. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ "Death of the Baroness Windsor", The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian, 13 November 1869, p. 5, "Other Archer ... died in 1833 without issue. He had two sisters, Lady Maria, Marchioness of Downshire, and Lady Harriet Clive, who was his favourite sister, and to her he left the bulk of his property, one of the estates being Hewell Grange in Worcestershire. To her also he left St. Fagans Castle and the extensive domains belonging to the Windsor estate in this county..."
- ^ a b c "The Penarth Mysteries: No 2 – The Buried Secrets Of Penarth's Plymouth Park". Penarth Daily News. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ Newman, page 291
- ^ "Time, gentlemen! Grangetown's disappearing pubs". Grangetown Community Action. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ "Death Of The Baroness Windsor", The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian, 13 November 1869, p. 5, "Simple and unostentatious in her manner, she strove in every possible way to increase the comforts of those around her... Her private donations were of the most extensive character, and but few... had any conception of the extent of her benevolence, or how many families were more or less dependent on her never-ceasing charity... In every movement which tended to the well-being of those around her, her large subscriptions expressed her sympathy with them. In the erection of churches, and in the restoration of old ones, no one equalled her ladyship."
- ^ "Death Of The Baroness Windsor", The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian, 13 November 1869, p. 5, "When Aberdare grew rapidly from the opening of the collieries of the district roundabout, she erected a church in the district of St. Fagans in that parish. Scarcely had it been completed when the overheating of a flue caused the timbers to take fire, and the whole building was quickly reduced to ashes. The Baroness, however, at her sole expense, built the church a second time."
- ^ Newman, pp. 94, 133
- ^ a b c "Death Of The Baroness Windsor", The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian, 13 November 1869, p. 5.
- ^ A History of Webheath, Elizabeth Atkins 2009.
- ^ "Funeral Of The Baroness Windsor". The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian. 27 November 1869. p. 5 – via British Newspaper Archive.
Sources
edit- "Death Of The Baroness Windsor". The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian. 13 November 1869. p. 5 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- John Newman (1995), The Buildings of Wales: Glamorgan, University of Wales Press, ISBN 0-14-071056-6