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Moreton Frewen
British politician

Moreton Frewen

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Biography

Hugh Moreton Frewen (8 May 1853 – 2 September 1924) was an Anglo-Irish writer on monetary reform who served briefly as a Member of Parliament (MP).

Early life

Frewen was born the 8 May 1853 in England.He was the fifth son of Thomas Frewen (1811–1870), MP for South Leicestershire, and Helen Louisa (nee Homan) Frewen (d. 1901).

He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he gained his BA in 1877.

Career

He emigrated to Wyoming during the cattle boom in the 1870s and 1880s. Frewen was a charming if financially incompetent adventurer from an English landed gentry family known for reckless financial and political schemes.After his marriage to the American heiress Clara Jerome (daughter of Leonard Jerome and sister of Jennie, wife of Lord Randolph Churchill and mother of Sir Winston Churchill), they settled together on a huge Wyoming ranch, The Prince of Wales Ranch, where Frewen built an enormous log lodge/castle later destroyed by fire and ran up ever increasing debt, earning the sobriquets "Mortal Ruin" and "the splendid pauper".

His laterally descended family, the Martins formerly of Charley Hall, Leicestershire, refer to him to this day however not as "Mortal Ruin" but as "Immortal Ruin", as he ran through two family fortunes before being granted a remittance and "encouraged" by family to emigrate to America (see remittance man).

Returning to the United Kingdom, where he owned homes in London and Cork, Frewen served as Vice President of the Imperial Federation League. He wrote on tariff reform and other economic matters, and was an advocate of bimetallism.

He became involved in Irish affairs through inheriting the Innishannon Estate, some 3,000 acres near Cork, and through his friendships with Lord Dunraven and Timothy Healy (MP).

Member of Parliament

He was elected unopposed at the December 1910 general election as an All-for-Ireland League MP for North East Cork, taking his seat in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.He resigned on 5 July 1911 because his seat was needed for Healy and because of his reactionary public statements: his opposition to the Parliament Bill to remove the legislative veto of the House of Lords was proving a political liability. Later he signed the British Covenant in support of Ulster, while continuing to engage in political intrigues.

Personal life

In 1881, he managed to marry Clarita "Clara" Jerome (1851–1935), daughter of the New York City financier Leonard Jerome, and sister to Lord Randolph Churchill's wife Jennie.He was a brother-in-law not only of Lord Randolph Churchill but also of Sir John Leslie of Glaslough.His niece Ruby (with whom he was not on good terms), daughter of his brother Stephen, was the second wife of Sir Edward Carson.Together, Moreton and Clara were the parents of two surviving sons and a daughter (another daughter, Jasmine, died at birth), including:

  • Hugh Moreton Frewen (1883–1967)
  • Captain Oswald Moreton Frewen (1887–1958), a member of the Royal Navy.
  • Clare Consuelo Frewen (1885–1970), the sculptress and writer.

Frewen died 2 September 1924 in England.

Works

  • The economic crisis, 1888
  • Melton Mowbray, and other memories, 1924

In popular culture

  • Frewen figures prominently in the novel Mortal Ruin by John Malcolm.
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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