Colin Christopher Paget Tennant, 3rd Baron Glenconner (1 December 1926 – 27 August 2010)[2] was a British peer, landowner and socialite. He was the son of Christopher Grey Tennant, 2nd Baron Glenconner, and Pamela Winifred Paget. He was also the nephew of Edward Tennant and Stephen Tennant, and the half-brother of the novelist Emma Tennant.
The Lord Glenconner | |
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Tenure | 4 October 1983 – 27 August 2010 |
Successor | Cody Tennant, 4th Baron Glenconner (grandson of Colin Tennant) |
Other titles | 4th Baronet Tennant |
Born | Colin Christopher Paget Tennant 1 December 1926 Chelsea, London, England |
Died | 27 August 2010 near Soufrière, Saint Lucia[1] | (aged 83)
Spouse(s) | |
Issue |
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Parents |
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Before succeeding to the peerage in 1983, he had travelled widely, especially in India and the West Indies. He was an avid socialite and a close friend of Princess Margaret, to whom his wife, the former Lady Anne Coke, was a lady-in-waiting. In 1958, he purchased the island of Mustique in The Grenadines for £45,000.[3]
Early life
editColin Tennant was born at 76 Sloane Street in Chelsea, London,[1] on 1 December 1926, the son of the second Baron Glenconner. His mother, Pamela, was the daughter of Sir Richard Paget, 2nd Baronet. After his parents divorced in 1935, he was educated at Scaitcliffe and Eton College, but for years, Tennant rarely saw his father. Holidays from Eton were spent with his maternal grandmother, Lady Muriel Paget, a formidable grande dame who had diverted a train from the Crimea to Siberia in World War I to save the lives of 70 British nannies.[citation needed]
After finishing his schooling at Eton, Tennant enlisted in the Irish Guards, serving during the tail end of World War II[4] and attaining the rank of lieutenant.[5]
After the war, he attended New College, Oxford. At Oxford, he gained a reputation for being "terribly kind to plain girls with nice manners and extremely waspish to pretty ones with nasty manners".[4]
After graduating, he worked for the family's merchanting business, C. Tennant, Sons & Co, and at the same time, began to attract the attention of the gossip columns as Princess Margaret's escort.[4] During the early 1950s, he was often involved in amateur dramatics; in 1953, he took part, with Princess Margaret, in a production for charity of an Edgar Wallace play, The Frog; Tennant played the title role (a serial killer), and the Princess was Assistant Stage Director.
It was during this period that Tennant was spotted as a possible husband for Princess Margaret, who had been publicly hurt by the collapse of her hopes of marrying the divorced commoner Group Captain Peter Townsend[6] during 1953. The following year, he was forced to deny newspaper reports that he would shortly announce his engagement to the Princess. "I don't expect she would have had me," he said in later years.[4] Princess Margaret met her future husband Tony Armstrong-Jones, who was hired to take wedding pictures at Tennant's 1956 wedding to Lady Anne Coke.
Mustique island
editAfter purchasing the Caribbean island of Mustique in 1958, Tennant built a new village for its inhabitants, planted coconut palms, vegetables, and fruit, and developed the fisheries.
In 1960, the British royal yacht Britannia carried Princess Margaret and her new husband, now Lord Snowdon, on a honeymoon cruise around the Caribbean. The royal couple visited Mustique to accept a wedding gift from Tennant, a plot of land on which the Princess was to build her holiday retreat, Les Jolies Eaux.
The cost of running Mustique depleted Glenconner's family fortune, and he was obliged to take on business partners. Eventually, he went into self-exile on St. Lucia, where assisted by Iranian investors, he built and for many years ran the "Bang Between the Pitons" restaurant.[7] After about three years, the restaurant, constructed as "an almost exact copy of Messel's stage set for the 1950s Broadway musical House of Flowers," went bankrupt. It was eventually resurrected by the Hilton chain of hotels as the Jalousie Bar, part of the Jalousie Resort.[8]
Glenconner and his involvement in Mustique has been the subject of multiple documentaries. In 1971, he was interviewed by Alan Whicker for an episode of Whicker's World set on the island. In 2000, a documentary by Joseph Bullman, titled The Man Who Bought Mustique, included Glenconner's first visit to Mustique since his exile.[9] According to a reviewer, Tennant's "occasionally dictatorial manner" was "amply displayed" in the documentary. To describe Tennant, he wrote, "You had to imagine your most crotchety uncle on his worst day and magnify that tenfold."[8]
Later life
editIn 1963, his father, the 2nd Baron Glenconner, sold the family business to Consolidated Gold Fields, and Tennant suddenly inherited £1 million. At first, father and son were retained as chairman and deputy chairman, but after his father's retirement in 1967, Tennant failed to become chairman and resigned.[4] The Tennants became significant landowners and industrialists over the years. Part of their land was in the West Indies, including a neglected 15,000 acres in Trinidad.[6]
Family and inheritance
editOn 21 April 1956, Tennant married Lady Anne Veronica Coke. Lady Anne is the daughter of Thomas Coke, 5th Earl of Leicester. Lady Anne had been one of Queen Elizabeth II's Maids of Honour at the 1953 coronation,[citation needed] and was also a close friend and lady-in-waiting of the Queen's sister, Princess Margaret.[10]
Lord and Lady Glenconner had five children, three sons and twin daughters:
- Hon. Charles Edward Pevensey Tennant (15 February 1957 – 19 October 1996; aged 39). He married Sheilagh Scott in 1993. He developed a heroin addiction and died of Hepatitis C.[11] His son Cody Charles Edward Tennant (born 2 February 1994) became the 4th baron.
- Hon. Henry Lovell Tennant (21 February 1960 – 2 January 1990; aged 29).[11][12] He died from AIDS. He married Tessa Cormack (1959–2018) in 1983;[13] their son, Euan Lovell Tennant (born 1983),[14] is the current heir presumptive to the barony.[citation needed] Euan is married to Helen Tennant.[15] They have 2 children together.
- Hon. Christopher Cary Tennant (born 25 April 1968). He suffered severe brain damage in a motorcycle accident in 1987.[12] He married Anastasia Papadakos in 1996. The couple later divorced. They have daughters Bella Tennant (b. 1997) and Demetra Tennant (b. 2000). Married secondly Johanna Lissack Hurn on 11 February 2011.[16]
- Hon. Flora May Pamela Tennant (born 8 November 1970), a god-daughter of Princess Margaret. She married 18 April 2005[citation needed] Anton Ronald Noah Creasy.
- Hon. Amy Jasmine Elizabeth Tennant (born 8 November 1970).[citation needed] No issue.
Colin Tennant inherited the peerage title and the Tennant baronetcy, along with the family's Scottish estate of The Glen, in 1983, on his father's death. The couple came to divide their time between their house on St. Lucia and their home in England. With his daughter May and her husband Anton, Glenconner began to develop the Beau Estate property between the Pitons. As his eldest son, the Hon. Charles Edward Pevensey Tennant (1957–1996), predeceased him, Glenconner was succeeded by his grandson, Cody Charles Edward Tennant (born 2 February 1994).
In December 2009, Tennant, then aged 83, learned he was also the father of London psychotherapist Joshua Bowler (born 1955). Bowler's mother, the artists' model and bohemian Henrietta Moraes, had become pregnant following a weekend spent with Tennant after the New Year's Eve 1954 Chelsea Arts Club Ball. However, she never told Tennant about the pregnancy and married the actor Norman Bowler seven months later; the couple divorced two and a half years later. After Moraes died in 1999, Joshua Bowler decided to investigate his parentage and wrote to Tennant after a mutual friend recalled seeing the young Tennant and Moraes leave the 1954 ball together. A paternity test revealed that Tennant was indeed Bowler's father, news that Tennant looked upon as "quite magical."[17] Tennant later announced his intention to recognise him in his will.[18]
When Lord Glenconner died in 2010, it was revealed that he had made a new will shortly before his death, leaving all his assets to an employee, Kent Adonai. The family contested this will, and after several years of legal battles, the estate was divided between Adonai and Cody Charles Edward Tennant, the fourth Lord Glenconner.[19][20][21]
In popular culture
editColin Tennant is portrayed by Pip Carter and Richard Teverson in the Netflix television series The Crown.[citation needed] Anne is played by Grace Stone and Nancy Carroll.[10] Colin is portrayed by Jonathan Hansler in the television film The Queen's Sister (2005).
In 2019, Lady Glenconner's memoir Lady in Waiting: My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown, was published by Hodder & Stoughton. "I married all of my husband," she writes. "Colin could be charming, angry, endearing, hilariously funny, manipulative, vulnerable, intelligent, spoilt, insightful and fun."[22][10]
Arms
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References
edit- ^ a b Davenport-Hines, Richard (9 January 2014). "Tennant, Colin Christopher Paget, third Baron Glenconner (1926–2010), socialite and landowner". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/103290. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Barker, Dennis (2010). "Lord Glenconner obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 30 July 2024.
- ^ "The History of Mustique". The Mustique Company. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
- ^ a b c d e "Lord Glenconner". The Daily Telegraph. London, UK. 29 August 2010. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
- ^ Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage (107th ed.). Wilmington, Delaware: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd.
- ^ a b Barker, Dennis (29 August 2010). "Lord Glenconner". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
- ^ Keel, Toby (20 August 2019). "Sugar Beach, St Lucia: The sweet spot in between the Pitons where you get a butler, four-poster bed and can whizz round in a tuk tuk". Country Life. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ a b Clarke, Gerald (31 July 2002). "Lord Glenconner on St. Lucia: The Intrepid Creator of Mustique Turns his Attention Elsewhere in the Caribbean". Architectural Digest. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ Holden, Stephen (9 May 2011). "Film review: No Man Is an Island, Or Owns One Forever". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ a b c Sampson, Annabel (15 October 2019). "Lady Anne Glenconner's memoir reveals her as the ultimate in royal companions". Tatler. Archived from the original on 8 November 2019.
- ^ a b Blow, Simon (25 October 2012). "How to blow £100 million". Evening Standard. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
- ^ a b "Courage of addicted aristocrat praised at funeral". The Herald. Glasgow. 30 October 1996. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
- ^ Willis, Tim (23 February 2011). "The final days of London bohemian Henry Tennant". Evening Standard. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
- ^ "Tessa Tennant obituary". The Times. 23 July 2018. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
[The couple] married on Mustique in 1983. Soon afterwards their son, Euan, who became an electrician, was born.
(subscription required) - ^ "Diary". Glen House. 10 February 2012. Archived from the original on 24 June 2019. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
- ^ "The Hon Christopher Tennant and Mrs J. Lissack - Marriages Announcements". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
- ^ Driscoll, Margarette (10 January 2010). "Joshua Bowler: the daddy of all Mustique secrets". The Times. London, UK.[dead link ]
- ^ Walker, Tim (29 August 2010). "Glenconner recognises his illegitimate son Joshua in his will". The Daily Telegraph. London, UK.
- ^ "In the end it took seven years to resolve. While Kent kept a huge amount of land and money, about half of Colin's estate was handed to Cody." Glenconner, Anne, Lady in Waiting: My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown.
- ^ Glenconner, Anne (17 October 2019). Lady in Waiting: My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1529359060.
- ^ "St. Lucian wins slice of multi-million-pound fortune after long legal battle - St. Lucia News Online". Archived from the original on 18 July 2018. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
- ^ Davenport-Hines, Richard (18 October 2019). "Lady in Waiting by Anne Glenconner review — Princess Margaret, Mustique and me". The Times. Retrieved 21 November 2019. (subscription required)
- ^ Debrett's Peerage. 2003. p. 650.