George Howard, 11th Earl of Carlisle


George Josslyn L'Estrange Howard, 11th Earl of Carlisle, styled Viscount Morpeth from 1911 to 1912, was a British nobleman, politician, and peer.

Early life

George Josslyn L'Estrange Howard was born on 6 January 1895. He was the eldest child, and only son, of Charles Howard, 10th Earl of Carlisle and the former Rhoda Ankaret L'Estrange. His three younger sisters were Lady Constance Ankaret Howard, Lady Ankaret Cecilia Caroline Howard, and Lady Elizabeth Henrietta Howard.
His mother was the eldest daughter of Col. Paget Walter L'Estrange and Emily L'Estrange. His paternal grandparents were George Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle and the radical temperance campaigner, the former Hon. Rosalind Frances Stanley.

Career

On 20 January 1912, he succeeded to the earldom of Carlisle upon the death of his father.
Lord Carlisle served in World War I as Lieutenant-Commander of the Royal Navy and was awarded the Croix de Guerre.
During World War II, he served as a director of the United Kingdom Commercial Corporation in Turkey. In 1947, he was a member of a London firm of stockbrokers.

Personal life

On 17 January 1918, Lord Carlisle was married to his first wife, the Hon. Bridget Hore-Ruthven, the eldest of the four daughters of Major-General Walter Hore-Ruthven, 10th Lord Ruthven of Freeland and the former Jean Lampson. Together, they were the parents of two children:
In June 1947, a divorce court in London granted a decree of divorce to Lord Carlisle against the Countess of Carlisle on the grounds of adultery with Sir Walter Monckton, whose wife at the same time obtained a similar decree. After their divorce, he married, secondly, on 16 August 1947 Esme Mary Shrubb Iredell, the second daughter of Dr. Charles Edward Iredell of London. They had one child:
In 1948, an unfinished portrait of Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire by Sir Joshua Reynolds insured for £5,000 was "slit from its frame and stolen from the unoccupied London apartment of the Earl and Countess of Carlisle". The robbers also stole jewlery and other valuables from the residence while the Earl was on holiday at Naworth Castle, his country seat in Cumbria.
Lord Carlisle died on 17 February 1963 in Dumfries, Scotland, and was succeeded by his only son, Charles. Lady Carlisle died on 4 June 1977.