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Glorious GoodwoodNow famous for its annual horse racing and motorsport events, this great estate in west sussex has been home to the duke of richmond for 80 years. Britain talks to the man about family, tradition and bringing about a time of change. By Rob Widdows.
A man and his dogs are heading home for tea. He walks slowly, pausing to gaze at the first green shoots of spring. This is Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, His Grace the 10th Duke of Richmond, Duke of Lennox, 5th Duke of Gordon and Duke of Aubigny. He is also a chartered accountant and chairman of the Goodwood Group of Companies. His family settled here in 1697 and there are still 12,000 acres of West Sussex countryside under his stewardship. Now in his 80th year, the Duke has seen the estate change almost beyond recognition. “When I was a boy the place was run pretty much as a large, very large, country house. There were probably 100 people here. Now we have 550 staff and a group of five core businesses. There were a lot of clocks, some of them extremely valuable, so the man came from the watchmakers to wind the clocks once a week. My brother and I saw little of our parents – we had our day nursery and our night nursery – and nanny took us downstairs every afternoon for tea. Then we went back upstairs. We went to school in London, and every morning we dressed in our Gordon tartans – if you were Scottish in any way, you flaunted it. Then we went away to boarding school and that was rather a shock.” The family has glamorous, rather racy origins. Charles Lennox, the 1st Duke of Richmond, was the illegitimate son of Charles II and his beautiful French mistress Louise de Kerouaille. At the king’s demise, she was given two chateaux and some land at Aubigny in France by Louis XIV in appreciation of her alleged spying activities in the court of King Charles.
The heart and soul of the estate is Goodwood House, a feast for the eyes both inside and out. The original Jacobean house, built in 1697, was later developed by the 3rd Duke with the help of architect James Wyatt. A Palladian-style south wing was added in the 18th century as well as the round towers with their copper-covered domes. Inside the house is a magnificent collection of paintings, furniture, porcelain and tapestries. This veritable treasure trove includes portraits by Van Dyck, Reynolds, and Romney – many of these on the walls of the splendid Regency ballroom. Goodwood is famous for its set of paintings of the Duke’s horses by George Stubbs and priceless paintings by Canaletto of the Duke’s London home at Richmond. Walking through the house, you will find beautiful 18th-century French furniture in the Yellow Drawing Room while in the Card Room is a unique collection of Sèvres porcelain, much of it bought straight from the factory by the Duke when he was ambassador in Paris in 1765. In the old Jacobean part of the house are the Gobelin tapestries, a gift from King Louis XV who, it is said, ordered too many for his own country home. Don’t miss the recentlyrestored Egyptian dining room with its ornamental cobras, scarabs and crocodiles. One of this Duke’s great passions is horse racing and in the 1980s he completely modernised the famous racecourse, building new grandstands.
The Duke is proud, too, of his connections with horse racing in the USA. Goodwood has a twinning arrangement with the Oak Tree Racing Association at Santa Anita Park in Los Angeles. Trips to the sunshine of California have proved to be popular with even the most traditional of members. “I thought it would be fun,” he says, “to have a twinning with a racecourse in America, and Kentucky was just too obvious. I like Americans because they are almost always very positive people; it’s a lot about taking risks, being entrepreneurial. So, yes, we like our association with Santa Anita.” During the last 15 years the Duke’s son, the Earl of March, has energetically taken the baton from his father, forcefully pushing the Goodwood estate into the 21st century. The man who will be the 11th Duke has established two worldfamous motor sport events, the Festival of Speed and the Revival, inheriting a passion for cars from his grandfather. The renaissance of the motor circuit, founded by his grandfather in 1948, is his most spectacular achievement to date. He has also restored Goodwood House to its original Regency splendour. “My son has vision and we are currently seeing almost half a million people coming to our motor sport and horse racing events. Yes, he has taken us forward. Some big changes.” Modest, charming, and very shrewd, the 10th Duke of Richmond has made a huge contribution to the stability of this great English country estate. He was the right man at the right time. The next 300 years will bring their own new challenges. Goodwood Estate, Chichester, West Sussex PO18 0PX; tel: (01243) 755000. Annual events at Goodwood: Vintage Fly-In and Air Display (May Bank Holiday) featuring historic aircraft, with the majority being built pre-1967; Festival of Speed (3-5 Jul) the famous hill climb motor race, Glorious Goodwood (28 Jul-1 Aug) British flat racing at its best; Goodwood Revival (18-20 Sep) recreating the golden era of motor racing. |