Henry Vivien Pierpont Conyngham, 8th Marquess Conyngham (born 25 May 1951), styled Viscount Slane until 1974 then Earl of Mount Charles from 1974 until 2009 and predominantly known as Lord Mount Charles, is an Anglo-Irish aristocrat who is best known for the rock concerts that he organises at his stately home Slane Castle, and for his column in the Irish Daily Mirror under the byline "Lord Henry".[1]

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Conyngham coat of arms

Biography

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Early life and succession

Henry Conyngham was born into an aristocratic family of partial Ulster-Scots descent, the eldest son of the 7th Marquess Conyngham (1924–2009) by his first wife, Eileen Wren Newsom.[2] The Conyngham dynasty historically belonged to what was known as the "Protestant Ascendancy", composed of Anglo-Irish aristocrats and gentry.

He attended Harrow School before studying at Harvard University. He became known as the Earl of Mount Charles, a courtesy title, in 1974. He succeeded his father in the marquessate of Conyngham and other hereditary peerages in March 2009 but, notably in Ireland, he is still frequently referred to as "Lord Mount Charles", his former courtesy title. He also inherited the title Baron Minster, of Minster Abbey in the County of Kent, created in 1821 in the Peerage of the United Kingdom for his ancestor, the 1st Marquess Conyngham (which gave the Marquesses Conyngham the automatic right to sit in the British House of Lords, until 1999).

Lord Conyngham and his wife, born Iona Grimston, divide their time between Beauparc House [3][4] and Slane Castle in County Meath; the latter was the family's principal ancestral seat until it was badly damaged by fire in 1991, but has since been restored.

Political career

The then Lord Mount Charles unsuccessfully contested the Louth constituency for Fine Gael at the 1992 general election.[5]

In 1997, the then Lord Mount Charles stood for election to Seanad Éireann for the Dublin University constituency, again without success.[5] At the 2004 European Parliament election, he was approached by Fine Gael to enter the contest for selection as its candidate for the East constituency.[6] However, when the television presenter and agricultural journalist Maireád McGuinness emerged as a potential candidate, Mount Charles withdrew from the race.[6]

Business career

The Marquess Conyngham enjoys a high profile in Ireland as the author of a weekly column in the Irish Daily Mirror.[7] He has been dubbed the rock and roll aristocrat or the rock and roll peer, owing to the very successful series of rock concerts he hosted starting in 1981,[8] held in the natural amphitheatre adjacent to Slane Castle.[9] These concerts have included performances by The Rolling Stones, Thin Lizzy, Queen, U2, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, David Bowie, Metallica, Guns N' Roses, Oasis and Madonna. Mountcharles received the Industry Award at the 2010 Meteor Awards.[10]

He has written an autobiography Public Space–Private Life: A Decade at Slane Castle, in which he described his business career and the challenges of being an Anglo-Irish peer in modern Ireland, and how being Anglo-Irish has gradually become more accepted in the Republic of Ireland.

In 2015, Lord Conyngham opened an Irish whiskey distillery in the former stableyard within the demesne of Slane Castle, and launched the "Slane Irish Whiskey" brand.[11]

Personal life

In 1971, Conyngham married Juliet Ann Kitson,[12] daughter of Major Robert Richard Buller Kitson (Grenadier Guards) and English interior decorator and J. Paul Getty's lover[13][14][15][16][17] Penelope de László (née Steele, later Baroness Keith of Castleacre). They have three children, a daughter and two sons, and were divorced in 1985:

In 1985, Conyngham married Lady Iona Charlotte Grimston (born 1953), the youngest daughter of the 6th Earl of Verulam. They have a daughter:

  • Lady Tamara Jane Conyngham (born 1991), married Cian Speers in 2023.[22]

See also

References

Sources

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