Norman Butler (polo)
Norman Frank Paul Butler was an international polo player raised and educated in England and Europe, a U. S. Navy Lieutenant bomber pilot during WW2, as well as a thoroughbred race horse owner and breeder in Europe, where he won several classic races including the Irish 1,000 Guineas and Irish St. Leger.
Early life, education and WW2
Norman Frank Paul Butler was born on December 2, 1918 to industrialist Paul Butler , son of industrialist Frank Osgood Butler, and Sarah Anne Josephine Rooney, who was born in County Mayo, Ireland and later resided in Paris and Monte Carlo.He was raised in England, France and Italy, and attended Hodder Place, Downside School and Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, England. He later studied Modern Greats at Oriel College, Oxford University.
During WW2 he served as a Lieutenant bomber pilot with Squadron VB-107, which was based in Natal, Brazil and Ascension Island. Squadron VB-107 became the most effective American squadron hunting U-boats during the war, sinking 12 submarines, and was only surpassed in total number of U-boats sunk during the conflict by two Royal Air Force squadrons operating from the Bay of Biscay. He is credited alongside Lieutenant Commander Paul Kenneth Blesh with the invention of the radar life raft, whereby a life raft was painted with metallic paint so that it could be dropped at sea and spotted by radar, helping rescue sailors and pilots. He was decorated three times, with the Air Medal, Bronze Star and Presidential Unit Citation.
Career, Polo and Horse Racing
From 1948 until 1960 he worked in England for the Butler family companies, and founded Butler S.A.. He played polo in England, Argentina and the United States, notably on teams including Maharaj Prem Singh, Cecil Smith, Rao Raja Hanut Singh, Winston Frederick Churchill Guest and Freddie Guest, as well as playing opposite Prince Philip at Cowdray Park and Guards Polo Club.In 1951 he was one of the founders of the Peramco Film Corporation Inc. located in New York City at 325 East 72nd Street, alongside Millicent Rogers and Arturo Peralta Ramos Jr. They commissioned screenplays by Roald Dahl of some of his short stories including The Great Automatic Grammatizator and Skin .
In 1962 he bought Kilboy House in County Tipperary, Ireland.He also owned Athgarvan Lodge, in County Kildare, which had been used by George IV, and which he bought for a then record £490,000 for a stud farm in Ireland. As a thoroughbred breeder in 1972 he won the classic Irish 1,000 Guineas and the Irish St. Leger as well as the Pretty Polly Stakes with his horse Pidget, trained by Kevin Prendergast and ridden by the jockeys T. P. Burns, Bill Williamson and Wally Swinburn.
Other notable horses included Pabui and Kilboy. He purchased several horses from the Aga Khan IV, including Emali. His horses raced in Ireland, England, Italy and France. He also worked with Vincent O'Brien and John Magnier among others. He later sold Kilboy House to Tony Ryan, founder of Ryanair.
He was a member of Buck's Club and a life member of the Corviglia Club.
Homes
In 1874 industrialist and member of the Jekyll Island Club James Ellsworth married Eva Frances Butler, daughter of Oliver Morris Butler, co-founder of the Butler Paper Company. They were the parents of the Polar Explorer Lincoln Ellsworth. James Ellsworth bought and restored the Villa Palmieri in Fiesole above Florence, where Bocaccio was thought to have written the Decameron, and which had hosted at various times Alexandre Dumas, James Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford and Queen Victoria among others, and where Norman Butler and his mother Sarah Anne Butler spent childhood summers until the death of James Ellsworth in 1925.The Butler family had homes since 1910 in Palm Beach, Florida, including on Via Bethesda and Golfview Road. They also owned ranches in South Dakota and Montana for the breeding of polo ponies.
In 1950 he purchased a 5 acre estate at First Neck Lane on Lake Agawam in Southampton, New York and an apartment at 525 Park Avenue. Later in the 1950's he purchased a townhouse at 217 East 61st Street from Prince Serge Obolensky, which had been a wedding gift from President Theodore Roosevelt to his daughter Alice Longworth in 1906. The house was later sold to the actor Montgomery Clift.
In 1957 he purchased, Newport, Rhode Island from the Von Reventlow family to house the Impressionist collection and furniture he and his first wife Pauline had amassed. They sold the Peabody and Stearns designed house after their divorce in 1958.
From 1960 until 1962 he rented Classiebawn Castle from Lord Mountbatten.
In 1962 he bought Kilboy House, Tipperary, from the Dunalley family as a winter home and base for his thouroughbred stables.
In 1966 he took up residence at the in Cap-d'Ail, which had been designed and built in 1892 by Sir Edward Malet, a British diplomat. The Villa Malet was a Beaux-Arts mansion set on 14 acres of gardens, and designed by the architect Hans-Georg Tersling.
He later lived between England, France, Monaco and Switzerland.
Personal life
In 1948 he married Pauline Katharine Winn at Caxton Hall, Westminster, daughter of Lady Baillie and the Hon. Charles John Frederick Winn, of Leeds Castle in Kent. They divorced in 1958. They had two children together, Sandra Butler and Paget Butler.In 1959 he married in Perth, Scotland his second wife, the Hon. Penelope Dewar, daughter of Lord Forteviot, owner of Dewar Whiskies in Scotland. They divorced in 1977. They had three children together, Paul Butler, Tiggy Butler and Sean Butler.
In 1981 he married at Kensington and Chelsea Register Office his third wife Baroness Gabriella Gröger von Sontag, fashion editor of German Vogue, daughter of a German banker and Director of the Dresdner Bank. They had one son together, Patrick de Butler.
He died on October 8, 2011, at age 92.