Helena Anne Beatrice Wentworth Fitzwilliam de Chair (born 1977), is a British heiress and television personality. She is married to former Business Secretary, Jacob Rees-Mogg.

Helena Rees-Mogg
Born
Helena Anne Beatrice Wentworth Fitzwilliam de Chair
Alma mater
Political partyConservative
Spouse
(m. 2007)
Children6
Parents
Relatives

Early life and family

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De Chair is the only daughter of Conservative MP Somerset de Chair, and Lady Juliet Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, the only child and sole heiress of the very wealthy 8th Earl Fitzwilliam (d.1948), who died in a small aircraft crash when she was aged 13. Also killed was his intended second wife, Kathleen Cavendish, Marchioness of Hartington, a daughter-in-law of the Duke of Devonshire and a sister of US President John F. Kennedy.[1] Her half-brother was Lord Nicholas Hervey. She is the aunt of Olympic athlete Lawrence Clarke and former Conservative MP Theo Clarke.

She grew up at her family's estate of Bourne Park, near Canterbury, Kent.[2]

Education

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She studied chemistry at the University of Bristol. After her studies, de Chair began working for Argus Media as a journalist. [3]

Family

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In 2006 de Chair became engaged to the Rt Hon Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, future Conservative politician and son of former Times editor Lord Rees-Mogg. De Chair had first met Rees-Mogg, when they were children, and they began dating the year before their engagement, after Rees-Mogg had gained the blessing of her mother.[4] The couple were married at Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, in 2007, in a ceremony at which the post-Vatican II Mass was celebrated in Latin.[5]

 
Since 2010, The Rees-Mogg family has lived at Gournay Court.

In 2010 the couple purchased the Grade II* listed Gournay Court in West Harptree, where they live with their six children.[6]

Wealth and inheritance:

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Her mother inherited her grandfather's estates, with a £45million estimated net worth, which have since passed into a trust for her benefit, and include his vast art collection, including four paintings by George Stubbs and six by Anthony van Dyck and properties in England, Ireland and the United States, to which de Chair is also the sole heir. [7]

References

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