Rose Paterson


Rose Emily Paterson was a British business executive, fundraiser, and the chairman of Aintree Racecourse.

Early life

Rose Emily Paterson was born on 13 August 1956 in Northumberland. She was the daughter of the 4th Viscount Ridley and Lady Anne Lumley. Her great-grandfather was Sir Edwin Lutyens, through his daughter Ursula, and her uncle was Nicholas Ridley, a prominent Conservative cabinet minister in the Thatcher government. Her brother, Matt Ridley, is the 5th Viscount Ridley, and she had two other siblings.
They lived near Seaton Burn at the family-owned Blagdon Estate. She was educated at Westfield School in Newcastle upon Tyne and West Heath Girls' School in Sevenoaks. As a schoolgirl, she ran a book on horse racing, and said "I made quite a killing". After school she took a gap year, and then read history at Murray [Edwards College, Cambridge|New Hall, Cambridge], and attended an art history course in Venice.

Career

She worked for Sotheby's auction house, provided advice and valuations on artworks. Following her husband's election as an MP in 1997, she was her husband's Shropshire-based personal assistant and office manager.
In 2014, she was appointed chairman of Aintree Racecourse, and stood down from working for her husband in 2015. She had been a racecourse committee director since 2005. In 2014, she became the Jockey Club Racecourses' first female chairman, succeeding The 4th Baron Daresbury.
She was appointed a member of the board of stewards at the Jockey Club, owners of Aintree, in 2019.

Personal life

In 1980, she married businessman and future Conservative cabinet minister Owen Paterson, son of Alfred Dobell Paterson and Cynthia M. Owen. They had two sons and a daughter. They lived at Shellbrook Hill in Ellesmere, Shropshire, a grade II listed building since May 1953, and Hillsborough Castle when Owen was Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.
Paterson contracted COVID-19 in 2020. She was found dead in woods near her home that June; West Mercia Police treated her death as "unexplained", and it was not thought that any third party was involved. She was 63.
Her death was later ruled by a coroner to be suicide. The Rose Paterson Trust was founded in her honour.