Lady Juliet Tadgell
Lady Ann Juliet Dorothea Maud Tadgell, previously Marchioness of Bristol, is a British heiress, race horse breeder, and landowner. She consistently appears on the Sunday Times Rich List with an estimated net worth of £45 million, based on family assets she inherited in 1948.
Early life and education
Lady Juliet was born to Peter Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, Viscount Milton, the only son of the 7th Earl Fitzwilliam, and his wife, Olive Plunket.In 1943, when she was eight, her father inherited the title of Earl Fitzwilliam, and she became Lady Juliet. By this time, her parents' marriage was strained, and there was talk of divorce. In 1948, Earl Fitzwilliam died in a plane crash in France with his lover, Kathleen Cavendish, Marchioness of Hartington, the widow of the heir to the Dukedom of Devonshire and a sister of the future U. S. President John F. Kennedy. As her father's only child, Lady Juliet, still aged only thirteen, inherited his whole unentailed estate and his huge art collection. The following year, she and her mother left the vast stately home of Wentworth Woodhouse in South Yorkshire, and most of its contents were sold.
Lady Juliet holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Oxford.
Marriages and family life
In 1960, Lady Juliet married Victor Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol, twenty years her senior, eighteen days after he inherited peerages and estates on his father's death. He had been divorced the previous year and in his twenties had been made bankrupt, declared the "No.1 Playboy of Mayfair", and gaoled for a drunken dare jewel robbery. The couple had two children:- Lord Nicholas Hervey
- Lady Anne Hervey, stillborn
In 1974 she married Somerset de Chair, who was a former Conservative Member of Parliament for South West Norfolk and Paddington South. The couple had one child:
- Helena Anne Beatrice Wentworth Fitzwilliam de Chair, who became a writer for an oil industry trade magazine. She married the Rt Hon. Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, future Conservative politician and son of former Times editor Lord Rees-Mogg, on 13 January 2007 at Canterbury Cathedral. They have six children.
Her daughter Helena attended the University of Bristol, and her son Nicholas was educated at Eton College, followed by Yale University.
On 26 January 1998, two days after her 63rd birthday, her son Nicholas committed suicide.