Arthur Wellesley, 5th Duke of Wellington explained

Honorific-Prefix:His Grace
The Duke of Wellington
Office2:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start2:18 June 1934
Term End2:11 December 1941
Hereditary Peerage
Predecessor2:The 4th Duke of Wellington
Successor2:The 6th Duke of Wellington
Birth Date:9 June 1876
Parents:Arthur Wellesley, 4th Duke of Wellington
Kathleen Bulkeley Williams
Spouse:The Hon. Lilian Maud Glen Coats
Children:Lady Anne Wellesley
Henry Wellesley, 6th Duke of Wellington
Birth Place:London, England, United Kingdom
Death Place:United Kingdom

Arthur Charles Wellesley, 5th Duke of Wellington, (9 June 1876 – 11 December 1941), known as Arthur Wellesley from 1876 to 1900, and styled as Marquess of Douro from 1900 to 1934, was a British nobleman and landowner.

Background and military career

Wellesley was born in 1876 to Arthur Charles Wellesley (youngest son of Lord Charles Wellesley) and his wife, Kathleen Bulkeley Williams. Wellesley's father inherited the ducal title and vast Wellington estates upon his elder brother's death in 1900, and became the 4th Duke of Wellington.

Wellesley attended Eton between 1890 and 1895, and later attended Trinity College at Cambridge. He was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 4th (Militia) battalion of the Lincolnshire Regiment on 7 July 1897, and served as Aide-de-camp to the Earl of Ranfurly, Governor of New Zealand.[1] After the outbreak of the Second Boer War in late 1899, he joined the regular army as a second lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards on 17 January 1900, and was part of a detachment sent to South Africa in March 1900 to reinforce the 3rd battalion fighting in the war.[2] He served with his regiment there until July 1902, when he returned home after the war ended the previous month.[3] He resigned his commission in 1903. He returned to active service as a temporary reserve second lieutenant in 1915, during World War I, and relinquished his commission in 1919, still a second lieutenant.

In 1934, he succeeded to the dukedom. He was also a justice of the peace.

Political activism

The duke was a supporter of several far right-wing causes. He was a member of the Anglo-German Fellowship from 1935 and served as President of the Liberty Restoration League, which was described by Inspector Pavey (an ex-Scotland Yard detective employed by the Board of Deputies of British Jews to infiltrate the far right) as being antisemitic. When Archibald Maule Ramsay formed the 'Right Club' in 1939, Wellington chaired its early meetings. Ramsay, describing the Right Club, boasted that "The main objective was to oppose and expose the activities of organised Jewry."[4] On the day that World War II broke out, the Duke of Wellington was quoted as blaming the conflict on "anti-appeasers and the fucking Jews". He died of pneumonia in 1941.[5]

Family

In 1909, he married Lilian Maud Glen Coats, elder daughter of George Coats (who became the 1st Baron Glentanar in 1916). They had two children:

Death

He died at 20 Devonshire Place, London. His probate was sworn the next year at £134,262.

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Hart′s Army list, 1900
  2. The War – the Queen and the Grenadier Guards . 15 March 1900 . 10 . 36090.
  3. The Army in South Africa – The return of the Troops . 2 July 1902 . 11 . 36809.
  4. News: Hitler's aristocratic admirers . Paul . Callan . . . 12 September 2009 . 30 September 2015.
  5. News: Stephen Poliakoff: Anti-semitism will always be around . https://web.archive.org/web/20121112202246/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/6570240/Stephen-Poliakoff-Anti-semitism-will-always-be-around.html . dead . 12 November 2012 . Nigel . Farndale . . 15 November 2009 . London . 30 September 2015.