Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth

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Gerard Vernon Wallop

Also Known As: "Gerard Portsmouth"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States
Death: September 28, 1984 (86)
Kenya
Immediate Family:

Son of Oliver Wallop, 8th Earl of Portsmouth and Marguerite Wallop, Countess of Portsmouth
Husband of Bridget Cory Wallop
Ex-husband of Mary Lawrence Wallop
Father of Oliver Wallop, Viscount Lymington; Private; Philippa Cadogan, Viscountess Chelsea and Private
Brother of Hon. Oliver Malcolm Wallop

Managed by: Michael Lawrence Rhodes
Last Updated:

About Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerard_Wallop,_9th_Earl_of_Portsmouth

Gerard Vernon Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth (16 May 1898 – 28 September 1984), styled Viscount Lymington from 1925 until 1943, was a British landowner, writer on agricultural topics, and politician.

Early life

He was born in Chicago, the son of Marguerite (Walker) and Oliver Henry Wallop, 8th Earl of Portsmouth. He was brought up near Sheridan, Wyoming in the United States, where his parents farmed. He was educated in England, at Farnborough, at Winchester College and at Balliol College, Oxford. He then farmed at Farleigh Wallop in Hampshire. Wallop was commissioned a temporary second lieutenant (probationary) in the Reserve Regiment, 2nd Life Guards on 19 January 1917, was transferred to the Guards Machine Gun Regiment on 10 May 1918, and commissioned a temporary lieutenant on 19 July 1918.

Conservative Party politics

Lord Lymington, as he then was, was Conservative Member of Parliament for the Basingstoke constituency from 1929 to 1934. He stepped down and caused a by-election in March 1934 (Henry Maxence Cavendish Drummond Wolff was elected). At this point he was in the India Defence League, an imperialist group of Conservatives around Winston Churchill, and undertook a research mission in India for them.

He attended the second Convegno Volta in 1932, with Christopher Dawson, Lord Rennell of Rodd, Charles Petrie and Paul Einzig making up the British representatives. It was on the theme L'Europa.

His exit from party politics was apparently caused by a measure of disillusion, and frustrated ambition.

Newton papers

In 1936 he sent for auction at Sotheby's the major collection of unpublished papers of Isaac Newton, known as the Portsmouth Papers. These had been in the family for around two centuries, since an earlier Viscount Lymington had married Newton's great-niece.

The sale was the occasion on which Newton's religious and alchemical interests became generally known. Broken into a large number of separate lots, running into several hundred, they became dispersed. John Maynard Keynes purchased many significant lots. Theological works were bought in large numbers by Abraham Yahuda. Another purchaser was Emmanuel Fabius, a dealer in Paris.

Right-wing groups

He was a member of and important influence on the English Mistery, a society promoted by William Sanderson and founded in 1929 or 1930. This was a conservative group, with views in tune with his own monarchist and ruralist opinions.

A split in the Mystery left Wallop leading a successor, the English Array. It was active from 1936 to the early months of World War II, and advocated "back to the land". Its membership included A. K. Chesterton, J. F. C. Fuller, Rolf Gardiner, Hon. Richard de Grey, Hardwicke Holderness, Anthony Ludovici, John de Rutzen, and Reginald Dorman-Smith. It has been described as "more specifically pro-Nazi" than the Mystery; Famine in England (1938) by Lymington was an agricultural manifesto, but traded on racial overtones of urban immigration. Lymington's use of Parliamentary questions has been blamed for British government reluctance to admit refugees.

He edited New Pioneer magazine from 1938 to 1940, collaborating with John Warburton Beckett and A. K. Chesterton. The gathering European war saw him found the British Council Against European Commitments in 1938, with William Joyce. He joined the British People's Party in 1943. The English Array was not shut down, as other organisations of the right were in the war years, but was under official suspicion and saw little activity.

The Kinship in Husbandry, which he also founded with Rolf Gardiner, was one of the precursors of the later Soil Association. It recruited Edmund Blunden, Arthur Bryant, H. J. Massingham,[18] Walter James, 4th Baron Northbourne, Adrian Bell and Philip Mairet.

Family and personal life

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerard_Wallop,_9th_Earl_of_Portsmouth#...

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Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth's Timeline

1898
May 16, 1898
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States
1923
January 14, 1923
1937
August 21, 1937
1984
September 28, 1984
Age 86
Kenya