Arthur Butler, 4th Marquess of Ormonde


James Arthur Wellington Foley Butler, 4th Marquess of Ormonde was the son of John Butler, 2nd Marquess of Ormonde and Frances Jane Paget. At the time of his birth, he was the third son of Lord and Lady Ormonde, and was christened James Arthur Wellington Foley Butler. He was a godson of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. Through his mother he was a grandson of General The Hon. Sir Edward Paget and a great-grandson of Henry Paget, 1st Earl of Uxbridge and George Legge, 3rd Earl of Dartmouth.

Career

Lord Arthur was educated at Harrow and at Trinity College, Cambridge. He later joined the army as a Lieutenant in the 1st Life Guards and served as a State Stewart to Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon while the latter was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
He was a Justice of the Peace in the county of Kent and a Deputy Lieutenant in the County Kilkenny. He was the 28th Hereditary Chief Butler of Ireland. Unlike previous generations, he did not live in the family seat of Kilkenny Castle as his son inherited it directly from his uncle. The contents of the castle were sold in 1935, and the castle was left neglected.

Personal life

He married the American heiress Ellen Stager on 8 March 1887 and had four children. Following their marriage, the couple were known as Lord and Lady Arthur Butler.
In 1891, the couple were recorded as living at 21 Park Lane, City of Westminster, London, and at Sandleford Priory, near Newbury, from at least 1895 to September 1898. They took a temporary residence in Cadogan Square in 1898. Their London residence was No. 7 Portman Square from 1899 until 1924, and from late 1925, they leased a larger London Townhouse at No. 11 Bryanston Square in London. 11 Bryanston Square remained their London home until at least 1938. The leasehold interest was sold by Ellen's executors in the mid 1950's.
In 1901, Lord and Lady Arthur purchased Gennings Park in Kent. The purchase of country estate after fourteen years of marriage was reportedly made following the death of Lord Arthur's cousin George O'Callaghan, 2nd Viscount Lismore in 1899; Lord Lismore had reportedly informed his family that, following the deaths of his two sons, Lord Arthur Butler would be the heir to his estates. Following Lord Lismore's death in 1898, his Will revealed that he had instead named Lord Arthur's nieces Lady Beatrice and Lady Constance Butler as the beneficiaries of his estate. Gennings Park remained the home of Ellen, Lady Arthur Butler until her death in 1951. In 1921, the UK Census recorded their household as including a Butler, Footman, Cook, Lady's Maid, three Housemaids, two Kitchen Maids, a Scullery Maid, and Pantry Boy.
After Lord Arthur's older brother, the 3rd Marquess of Ormonde, died in 1919, and Arthur inherited the title, Lord Ormonde's son George Butler, 5th Marquess of Ormonde inherited the bulk of the family estates to avoid double taxation. Lord Arthur seems to have requested that his older brother alter his will in favor of his son George; records survive of a letter written by Lord Ormonde to George Butler dated 27 June 1916 outlining changes to his will which "your father has asked me to alter" which postponed Lord Arthur's use of the Ormonde Estate in favor of George, George's sons and George's brother Arthur and his male issue. Lord Ormonde requested that:
George not make any alteration of the family seat, Kilkenny Castle, and shooting lodge, Ballyknockane Lodge, Tipperary without consulting Lord Arthur and obtaining his approval;
That Lord Arthur would have use of Plate and other articles "as he shall desire"; and,
That Lady Arthur, during the lifetime of Lord Arthur, would have use of any Family Jewels which Lord Ormonde had the power to dispose of.

Wealth

Personal Wealth

In the early 1890s Lord Arthur received a £500 annuity from his brother Lord Ormonde. Following the death of his mother in 1903, Arthur was named as the residuary legatee of her estate, and inherited approximately £10,000 of her £25,000 fortune in England and Ireland.
Following the death of his older brother in 1919, Arthur received a £3,000 annuity payable as a charge on the Ormonde Settled Estates Trust under the terms of Lord Ormonde's Will; this amount was reduced to £2,200 per year in the late 1920's. Following his death in 1943, the gross value of his estate for Probate in England was £104,258; the net value was £100,640 from which £8,634 in death duties were paid.

Wife's Fortune

Arthur's wife Ellen was widely rumoured to possess a personal fortune amounting to US$1,000,000 at the time of their marriage in 1887; however her third-share of her father's estate was likely closer to $300,000, equivalent to £60,000 in the 1880s. Her father, General Anson Stager, was an early pioneer of the use of the telegraph and was the chief of U.S. Military Telegraph during the Civil War.
In the 1920s, the sister of Ellen, Marchioness of Ormonde, Mrs Annie Stager Hickox, died in Monte Carlo. She left a total estate of $847,207, much of which was left to Lady Ormonde. Ellen retained control over her American wealth during the couples marriage; following her sisters' deaths in 1922 and 1923, her Trusts, based in the State of Ohio, were structured so that the net income was paid to Ellen and her husband Arthur in equal shares. This income was approximately $30,000 each in 1925, which would equate to approximately £6,200 in 1925. and the Trusts were later restructured in 1929 so that life annuities of £6,000 each were payable to Arthur and Ellen. This arrangement lead to tax litigation in the early 1930's, as the British Commissioners for Taxation attempted to levy tax on the higher gross income of the Ohio Trust, rather than the £12,000 combined American income of Lord and Lady Ormonde. The Ormondes were ultimately successful in an appeal of this decision in 1932.

Issue

Lord and Lady Ormonde had four children:

Later life and death

Following the outbreak of the Second World War, the Ormondes vacated their London Residence at No. 11 Bryanston Square. The Blitz left parts of Bryanston Square in need of extensive repairs; a local report in March 1946 noted that several houses on the east side, including No. 11, were still awaiting reinstatement under the War Damage Commission scheme. Estate papers held at the National Archives record the post-war repairs carried out to Nos 10–12.
Arthur spent the final years of his life at his country estate Gennings Park in Kent. The 1939 Register of England and Wales records that the Ormonde Household continued to include 11 servants at the time of the survey, including a Housekeeper and Gardener. The house also hosted a number of evacuated schoolchildren and their schoolmaster. An "indoor" staff of eight servants was maintained during the 1940s.
Ormonde died in 1943 at the age of 93; as a newborn he had been christened as a godson of the Victor of the Battle of Waterloo, and he had lived to see German Bombers flying over Kent during the Battle of Britain. He was succeeded by his son George Butler as Marquess of Ormonde and Chief Butler of Ireland. His ashes lie in Ulcombe, Kent.