Charles Greville, 3rd Baron Greville


Charles Beresford Fulke Greville, 3rd Baron Greville was a British soldier and aristocrat.

Early life

He was the second son of four children born to Lady Beatrice Violet Graham and Algernon Greville, 2nd Baron Greville, who married in 1863. His older brother, Ronald Greville, died in 1908. His younger sisters were Hon. Camilla Dagmar Violet Greville and Hon. Lilian Veronique Greville. His father was a Liberal MP for Westmeath who was appointed a Groom in Waiting to Queen Victoria in 1869 and, from 1873 to 1874, served as a Lord of the Treasury in Gladstone's government.
His paternal grandparents were Fulke Greville-Nugent, 1st Baron Greville and his wife, Lady Rosa Nugent. His maternal grandparents were James Graham, 4th Duke of Montrose and the former Hon. Caroline Agnes Horsley-Beresford.

Career

From 1893 to 1895, Greville served as Aide-de-camp to the Earl Cadogan, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, followed by Aide-de-camp to Lord Northcote, the Governor of Bombay from 1900 to 1904. From 1904 to 1908, he served as Military Secretary to the Governor-General of Australia.
From 1899 to 1905, he was a Captain with the 7th Queen's Own Hussars. From 1914 to 1918 during World War I, he was a Major with the Lovat Scouts. From 1914 to 1943, he was chairman of St George's Hospital. In 1919, he was made an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.
As his older brother, Ronald, died without issue in 1908, succeeded to his father's barony upon his death in 1909. The Greville estate aggregated to 20,000 acres across England.

Personal life

In February 1909, his mother, Lady Violet, wrote about the decadence of British society, blaming American brides. "'This,' she writes, 'has struck at the root of our family life and introduced a new element into the simplicity and dignity of old-fashioned households. The rich American has no traditions; no prejudices in favor of old customs, duties, or responsibilities; she is essentially irresponsible, and measures everything by one standard only--money. The result permeating through all classes has considerably increased luxury and made for independence. It has, far more than any suffragette movement, given liberty to women to do as they like; for the American regards her husband as an inferior being, made to work for her, and to lavish pleasures and gifts as a reward for her beauty and sprightliness.'" At the time, it was thought to be a criticism of the marriage of Lord Granard to Beatrice Mills.
Nine months later on 24 November 1909, Charles was married to American heiress Olive Kerr at St Paul's Church, Knightsbridge. Olive was more than twenty minutes late to the wedding due to the breakdown of her car on the way to the ceremony. The wedding was in London, followed by a large reception at the Carlton House Terrace home of Freddie Guest and his American wife, Amy Phipps, which the Greville's had rented for a year. The guests at the wedding included Prince Alexander of Teck. Olive, the widow of banker Henry S. Kerr, was a daughter of John W. Grace of Leybourne Grange in Kent and a niece of Michael P. Grace and Mayor William Russell Grace, founder of W. R. Grace and Company. Together, Olive and Charles were the parents of:
Lord Greville died on 14 May 1952 and was succeeded in the barony by his only son, Ronald. Upon Ronald's death in 1987, the barony of Greville became extinct.
Lord Greville, Charles Beresford Fulke Greville had two sons. The second son Peter Charles Algernon Ascroft Greville was born in 1916 at Ankerwycke Priory. The mother who was separated from her husband was Cecil Enid Violet Ascroft, Lord Greville's niece and the daughter of Major Brooke Southwell Greville, Kings Messenger. They both worked at the War Office and the Greville families closely socialised together.