Lady Georgiana Fane Explained

Lady Georgina Fane
Birth Name:Lady Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane
Birth Date:25 January 1801
Birth Place:Apethorpe Palace, Northamptonshire[1]
Death Date:[2]
Death Place:Mayfair, London, England
Nationality:British
Known For:Pursuit of the Duke of Wellington
Occupation:Heiress

Lady Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane (25 January 1801 – 4 December 1874) was an English heiress from the Fane family. She was the daughter of John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmorland and his second wife the former Jane Huck-Saunders. Her mother bore four other children before separating from her father, after ten years of marriage.

Lady Georgiana is known for two things, a much commented upon portrait of her, when she was five or six years old, dressed as a peasant girl, and for her apparent stalking of the Duke of Wellington.

She met Wellington in 1815, shortly after his final victory over Napoleon Bonaparte at the Battle of Waterloo; she was 14 years old, and he was 47.

Lord Palmerston, who was carrying on an affair with her married half-sister, Sarah Villiers, Countess of Jersey, proposed to Lady Georgiana, twice, in 1823, but she turned him down.

The existence of suggestive letters, from Wellington, seems to confirm they did have a sexual relationship in the 1820s. After his wife, the former Kitty Pakenham, died in 1830, Lady Georgiana, and several other women intensified their interest in Wellington, hoping to become his second wife. She could not accept his rejection of her, and harassed him for the rest of his life.

In 1846, she was sculpted by John Edward Carew.[3]

She died at 5 Upper Brook Street, in Mayfair, London, aged 73.[2]

Notes and References

  1. 1871 England Census
  2. News: Deaths . . The Times Digital Archive . 1.
  3. Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851 by Rupert Gunnis