Henrietta Grosvenor
Henrietta de Hochepied, Baroness de Hochepied was an English aristocrat, socialite, and courtesan.
Early life
She was one of four daughters born to Lady Henrietta Vernon and Henry Vernon of Hilton Hall, former Member of Parliament for Lichfield and Newcastle-under-Lyme.New Female Coterie
After her separation from the Baron Grosvenor, Henrietta lived in Paris and London in the subsequent years, with the emotional and financial support of several men, and the press continued to report on her lovers and her appearances at social occasions for decades. She was a member of the social club for the 'demi-reps' nicknamed the New Female Coterie by the English press, whose members comprised fellow elite women publicly shamed for infidelity such as Caroline Stanhope, Countess of Harrington and Seymour Fleming. Janine Barchas suggests that the legacy of the scandals attached to Henrietta Vernon may have inspired Jane Austen in writing her early epistolary novel Lady Susan, which centres on the charming and flirtatious Lady Susan Vernon.Personal life
On 19 July 1764, she married Richard Grosvenor, 1st Baron Grosvenor, later Earl Grosvenor at St George's Church, Hanover Square. They had four sons, including:- Robert Grosvenor, who married Eleanor Egerton, the only child of Thomas Egerton, 1st Earl of Wilton, in 1794.
Lady Grosvenor prevented the baron from securing a divorce on the grounds of her adultery by gathering evidence of his own extensive sexual misconduct, personally 'going into bawdy houses to search and procure witnesses'. The diarist and artist Joseph Farington dubbed Lord Grosvenor as 'one of the most profligate men of his age, in what relates to women'. This wealth of evidence meant that the baron could not be granted an annulment, and was obliged to support his wife for the rest of his life. The couple's legal separation in 1771 included yearly maintenance payments of £1200 to Lady Grosvenor.