Capt. George Henry Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers

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Capt. George Henry Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers

Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
Death: June 17, 1966 (76)
Immediate Family:

Son of Alexander Edward Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers and Alice Ruth Hermione Fox-Pitt-Rivers
Ex-husband of Emily Rachel Forster and Rosalind Venetia Fox Pitt-Rivers
Father of Michael Pitt-Rivers; Julian Alfred Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers and George Anthony Fox Pitt-Rivers
Brother of Marcia Ruth Georgiana Astley-Corbett

Managed by: Michael Lawrence Rhodes
Last Updated:

About Capt. George Henry Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers

George Henry Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, one of the wealthiest men in England in the interwar period, was an anthropologist and Eugenics expert, who embraced Antibolshevism and Antisemitism and was interned by the British government for two years during World War II.

Pitt-Rivers was born in London, his birth registered under the surname Fox in Chesterfield. He was a son of Alexander Edward Lane Fox-Pitt-Rivers (2 November 1855 – 19 August 1927) and of his wife Alice Ruth Hermione, daughter of Lord Henry Thynne. His father was the eldest son of Augustus Pitt Rivers, ethnologist and anthropologist and founder of the Pitt Rivers Museum, upon whose death in 1900 he inherited the Pitt-Rivers estate. After Alexander died in 1927, the estate was inherited by George and it was so large that "it was said, albeit with exaggeration, that he could ride from coast to coast without leaving his own land".

He was a Captain in the Royal Dragoon Guards and took part in World War I. He was wounded in the First Battle of Ypres and subsequently sent to England for surgery and recuperation. After the war he published a book The World Significance of the Russian Revolution, the first of his antibolshevik and antisemitic public activities. During 1922–25, Pitt-Rivers held the position of Principal Secretary and Aide-de-Camp to the Governor-General of Australia, his father-in law. His experience with the Maori led to his lasting interest in anthropology, which he studied in Oxford under Bronisław Malinowski.

In 1927 he attended the World Population Conference and published a book Clash of Cultures and the Contact of Races. Two years later, Pitt-Rivers was elected a fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute; he also represented the Eugenics Society at the International Federation of Eugenics Organizations. From 1931 to 1937, Pitt-Rivers held the positions of the Secretary General and Treasurer of the International Union for the Scientific Investigation of Population Problems, where he came to contact with German eugenicists Eugen Fischer and his assistant Lothar Loeffler. During this time, he also became increasingly embroiled in politics, praising the ideas of Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler.

Pitt-Rivers was locked up in Brixton Prison and Ascot internment centre (1940–1942) during the Second World War as a Moseley-ite Nazi sympathiser under the Defence Regulation 18B. After the War, he met Stella Lonsdale, who had herself been incarcerated in Paris by the Germans, suspected of being an English spy;when she eventually managed to make her way to England, she was imprisoned suspected of being a German spy. She became George's mistress, and took his name, though they never married.

Stella inherited from George when he died in 1966. In his Will he left Stella instructions that any property to be sold must be sold individually, rather than as an estate, in order that tenants might buy the properties they leased from the Pitt-Rivers Estate. Much of the village of Okeford Fitzpaine was thus released. Stella also sold off a large proportion of the artefacts held in the Pitt-Rivers Museum at Farnham that she also inherited from George. The Pitt-Rivers Museum in Oxford has been trying ever since to recover those items – which were uncatalogued.

George Henry Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers was twice married; firstly to the Hon. Rachel Forster (daughter of the 1st Baron Forster) on 22 December 1915, the marriage was dissolved in 1930. They had two sons: Michael Pitt-Rivers (1917–1999), a West Country landowner who gained national notoriety in the 1950s when he was put on trial charged with buggery. This trial was instrumental in bringing public attention—and opposition—to the laws against homosexuality as they then stood; Julian Pitt-Rivers (1919–2001), a social anthropologist, an ethnographer, and a university professor. George Pitt-Rivers married secondly, on 14 October 1931, Rosalind Venetia Henley,[16] (4 March 1907 – 14 January 1990), a biochemist, whose parents were the Hon. Anthony Morton Henley (son of the 3rd Baron Henley) and the Hon. Sylvia Laura Stanley (daughter of the 4th Baron Stanley of Alderley), by whom he had a third son: Anthony (b. 1932).

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