Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Earl of Wilton | |
Birth Name: | Francis Egerton Grosvenor |
Birth Date: | 8 February 1934 |
Office: | Earl of Wilton |
Term Start: | 1999 |
Predecessor: | Seymour Egerton |
Office2: | Baron Ebury |
Term Start2: | 5 May 1957 |
Predecessor2: | Robert Grosvenor |
Alma Mater: | Melbourne University |
Francis Egerton Grosvenor, 8th Earl of Wilton (born 8 February 1934), also known as Lord Francis Ebury,[1] is an Anglo-Australian aristocrat, and academic.
Lord Wilton is the eldest son of Robert Egerton Grosvenor, 5th Baron Ebury, DSO, and his first wife, Anne Acland-Troyte. Lord Wilton succeeded his father as 6th Baron Ebury in 1957 and his fourth cousin, Seymour Egerton, as 8th Earl of Wilton in 1999.
As the great-great-great-grandson of Robert Grosvenor, 1st Marquess of Westminster, Lord Wilton is also heir presumptive to the title Marquess of Westminster currently held by Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster, Lord Wilton's fourth cousin-once-removed. Lord Wilton's stepfather from 1941-1947 was Henry Peregrine Hoare (1901-1981), son of Lady Geraldine Mariana Hoare (née Hervey, 1869-1955) and great great-uncle of Olivia Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster.[2] [3]
Educated at Eton College, he pursued a career in the financial services industry in London, Melbourne and Hong Kong, before taking a doctorate in Philosophy-Arts at Melbourne University (2001), where he taught as Dr Francis Ebury.[4]
Lord Wilton served on the Board of Directors of Victorian Opera (Melbourne) 2012–17.[5]
Lord Wilton has married three times. He was married firstly on 10 December 1957 to Gillian Elfrida Astley Soames (marriage dissolved 1962). They had one son:
Secondly, he married Kyra Aslin on 8 March 1963 (marriage dissolved 1973) without issue. Thirdly, he married Suzanne Jean Suckling in 1974. They remained married until her death 44 years later and had one daughter:
His third wife was a biographer who wrote under the name "Sue Ebury": The Many Lives of Kenneth Myer; Weary the Life of Sir Edward Dunlop, Weary: King Of The River. An editor and publisher, Lady Wilton was also a member of the Development Council of the National Library of Australia and patron of the Australian Garden History Society.