Hungerford Crewe, 3rd Baron Crewe
![](../I/m/Hungerford_Crewe_Vanity_Fair_7_January_1882.jpg)
Lord Crewe as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, January 1882
Hungerford Crewe, 3rd Baron Crewe FSA, FRS (10 August 1812 – 3 January 1894) was an English landowner and peer.
The son of John Crewe, 2nd Baron Crewe, an army general, and Henrietta Maria Anna Walker-Hungerford,[1][2] he was educated at Eton College and Christ Church, Oxford.[3] He was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1840 and of the Royal Society in 1841.[3][4]
Landlord and charitable works
On his father's death in 1835, he became the third Baron Crewe and inherited the Jacobean mansion of Crewe Hall in Cheshire, together with a large estate in Cheshire, Staffordshire and Leicestershire.[1] In 1871, he was the fifth greatest landowner in Cheshire, with a total of 10,148 acres (4,107 ha).[5] At his death in 1894, the total rents were estimated at £37,000 per year.[1] He appears to have been a relatively benevolent landlord, rebuilding farms, providing cottages and endowing schools.[1] In 1866, he paid more compensation to tenant farmers whose herds were affected by the cattle plague outbreak than was required by law.[6] He also made many charitable gifts, for example in Sandbach where he donated his income as lord of the manor to the local board, gave land for a town and market hall, and erected a drinking fountain.[1]
It was a period of rapid change: when he inherited the estate, the area to the west of Crewe Hall park was countryside with scattered farms; by his death it was occupied by the major railway centre of Crewe. He unsuccessfully opposed the construction of a Silverdale and Madeley Railway Company line from Newcastle-under-Lyme to Wrexham, which passed through the Crewe estate.[7]
Alterations to Crewe Hall
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Lord Crewe commissioned Edward Blore to make alterations to Crewe Hall (1837–42). These included major changes to the plan of the building, redecoration of the interior in a Jacobethan style more sympathetic to the original Jacobean house, and modernisations including the installation of a warm-air heating system. Blore also added a centrepiece and clocktower to the stables quadrangle and built a gate lodge. The total cost of the works was £30,000.[8][9][10][11]
A fire gutted the main hall in January 1866.[12] Extensive restoration work was carried out for Lord Crewe by E. M. Barry, son of Sir Charles Barry, the architect of the Palace of Westminster (1866–70).[8][9][10] Barry added a tower to the west wing; required for water storage, the tower was intended to unite the east and west wings of the hall. He also reorganised the plan of the ground floor.[8] The gardens were redesigned after the fire by W. A. Nesfield, and his son William Eden Nesfield also designed various estate buildings.[10]
Lord Crewe died of influenza at Crewe Hall in 1894. He never married and the barony became extinct on his death.[1] His estates were inherited by his nephew, Robert Milnes, Baron Houghton, later Earl and Marquess of Crewe, son of his sister Annabella Hungerford Crewe.[13]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Anon. (5 January 1894), "Obituary: Lord Crewe", The Times, p. 8
- ↑ Hinchliffe, Edward (1856), Barthomley: In Letters from a Former Rector to his Eldest Son, London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, p. 323
- 1 2 thePeerage.com: Person Page - 23241, Darryl Lundy, retrieved 2009-01-25
- ↑ Library and Archive catalogue: Crewe; Hungerford (1812 - 1894); 3rd Baron Crewe, Royal Society, retrieved 2009-01-25
- ↑ Crosby, Alan. A History of Cheshire, p. 87 (Phillimore; 1996) (ISBN 0 85033 932 4)
- ↑ Scard, Geoffrey. Squire and Tenant: Life in Rural Cheshire, 1760–1900 (A History of Cheshire, Vol. 10; series editor: J.J. Bagley), p. 91 (Cheshire Community Council; 1981) (ISBN 0 903119 12 9)
- ↑ Scard, p. 36
- 1 2 3 de Figueiredo, Peter & Treuherz, Julian. Cheshire Country Houses, pp. 66–71 (Phillimore; 1988) (ISBN 0 85033 655 4)
- 1 2 Pevsner, Nikolaus & Hubbard, Edward. The Buildings of England: Cheshire, pp. 191–195 (Penguin Books; 1971) (ISBN 0 14 071042 6)
- 1 2 3 Robinson, John Martin. A Guide to the Country Houses of the North-West, pp. 24–26 (Constable; 1991) (ISBN 0 09 469920 8)
- ↑ Scard, p. 23
- ↑ Anon. (4 January 1866), "Destruction of Crewe-hall by fire", The Times, p. 6
- ↑ Davis, John. Milnes, Robert Offley Ashburton Crewe-, marquess of Crewe (1858–1945), in: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (September 2004; January 2008), Oxford University Press, retrieved 2009-01-23