Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Viscount Cowdray | |
Birth Date: | 17 June 1944 |
Heir: | Peregrine Pearson |
Parents: | Weetman Pearson, 3rd Viscount Cowdray Lady Anne Pamela Bridgeman |
Spouse: | Ellen Erhardt Marina Rose Cordle |
Michael Orlando Weetman Pearson, 4th Viscount Cowdray, (born 17 June 1944)[1] of Cowdray Park in West Sussex, is a landowner in West Sussex with and is a major shareholder of the FTSE 100 company Pearson plc, the construction, now publishing, company founded by his ancestor in the 19th century.
He is the eldest son and heir of Weetman Pearson, 3rd Viscount Cowdray (1910–1995)[2] [3] of Cowdray Park, Sussex and of Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire, by his first wife Lady Anne Pamela Bridgeman (1914-2009), a daughter of Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford (1873–1957) and a first cousin of Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester.[4] His parents separated when he was two years old.[5] His great-grandfather, who founded the family's fortune, was the prominent businessman Weetman Dickinson Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray (1856–1927), created Viscount Cowdray in 1917. The paternal estate of Dunecht in Scotland was inherited by his half-brother Charles Anthony Pearson (born 1956).
He attended Gordonstoun, a boarding school in Elgin, Moray, Scotland, after which he served the British Army for two years, worked as a financier in the City of London and briefly as a farmer. In the late 1960s he became a film producer, running Cupid Productions, a film production company.[3] [6] He produced Sympathy for the Devil, a film starring The Rolling Stones and directed by Jean-Luc Godard, and Vanishing Point in 1971. In 1985, he was listed in Debrett's Peerage as a resident of Le Schuylkill, a high-rise building in Monaco.[7] Later in the 1980s he returned to England. He was a director of the jewellers Theo Fennell Plc. He has served on the board of trustees of the Tibet House Trust for 20 years.[2] [8]
See main article: article and Cowdray Park, West Sussex. In 1995 he inherited his 16500acres paternal estate at Cowdray Park, in West Sussex, purchased by his great-grandfather in 1909, now containing the mansion house known as Cowdray Park, a polo club, a golf club, a dairy herd, forestry, 330 houses, several farms and much of the town of Midhurst. In and in 2011, he put the 16 bedroom mansion house up for sale via agents Knight Frank, at an asking price of £25 million, including two lakes, two swimming pools, six cottages, 12 flats, a bowling alley, cricket pitch, polo field,[9] but with only of the estate. In 2017 having failed to find a buyer for the house, he took it off the market and drew up plans to convert the two wings into 7 short-leasehold luxury apartments with the reception areas to be hired out for conferences, corporate events and weddings.[5] He retains the surrounding 16500acres