Henry Chandos Pole Gell


Henry Chandos Pole Gell was a High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1886/7. He took the additional surname Gell when he inherited the Gell fortune in 1842, and lived at Hopton Hall in Hopton, Derbyshire.

Early life

Henry Chandos Pole was the second son of Edward Sacheverell Chandos-Pole, of Radbourne Hall, and Anna Maria Wilmot, a daughter of Rev. Edward Sacheverel Wilmot. His elder brother, Edward Sacheverell Chandos Pole, married Lady Anna Caroline Stanhope, while his younger sisters, Charlotte Chandos-Pole, married Hon. John Yarde-Buller, and Eleanor Chandos-Pole, married Vice-Admiral Henry Bagot.
His paternal grandparents were Mary Ware and Sacheverell Pole, who later adopted the additional surname of Chandos, in 1807.

Career

In 1842, he took the arms and surname Gell when he succeeded to the estate at Hopton Hall. Gell was High Sheriff in 1866/7. For many years main residence was at Heverswood in Kent as he leased Hopton Hall to a relative.
Gell took an active interest in agricultural development, and was a member of the council of the Royal Agricultural Society of England. A contemporary obituary states that Gell was ''″well known throughout the country by reason of the deep interest he took in agriculture... he maintained an excellent heard of shorthorns at Hopton, and was one of the first to perceive the importance of the shire horse.″''

Personal life

In 1851, Chandos-Pole-Gell married Henrietta Auriol Drummond-Hay, a daughter of Edward Drummond-Hay and Louisa Margaret Thomson. She was one of ten children including Sir Edward Drummond-Hay and Sir John Hay Drummond Hay. Before her death in 1868, they were the parents of five daughters, including:
In 1869, he married Teresa Charlotte Manningham-Buller, daughter of Sir Edward Manningham-Buller, 1st Baronet, of Dilhorne Hall, Staffordshire. They had a son:
Gell died at his residence Hopton Hall on 31 October 1902, and he was buried at Carsington.