Many remarkable stories are to be found hidden within the history of the broader New England, stories once well known but now much diminished by time. This is one such story.
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I am not sure when I first met Captain Hugh Frewen (or Cappie as he was known), but it must have been in the early 60s. I clearly remember him from New England New State Meetings and from our car drive to Sydney. There he stood out in his tropical drill suit, frail but still erect.
At the time, I had no idea of his history. He was just a friend of my grandfather's.
I did find out a little later that he was Winston Churchill's first cousin when I discovered a letter in my grandfather's papers from Clementine Churchill to Hugh Frewen.
I did find out a little later that he was Winston Churchill's first cousin when I discovered a letter in my grandfather's papers from Clementine Churchill to Hugh Frewen.
In 1943, David Drummond had published a book called Australia's Changing Constitution: No states or new states. Frewen sent a copy to Winston Churchill asking him to read it.
Clementine replied to say that Winston had yet to read it, perhaps not surprisingly in the circumstances, but had asked her to thank Hugh and say that he would read it. Drummond had annotated the letter to say that Hugh was Churchill's cousin.
I knew little more until I watched a BBC TV series telling the story of his mother and her sisters. I was immediately caught.
There was such an enormous difference between the quiet hills of Dorrigo where High Frewen spent the last years of his life and the world of sometimes wealth and imperial power that Hugh Frewen came from.
We can begin our story in 1849 with the marriage in New York of Leonard Jerome and Clarrisa (Clara) Hall. The couple had four daughters, one of whom died young.
Known as the King of Wall Street, Leonard Jerome was a flamboyant and successful stock speculator and railway investor who made and lost several fortunes.
Jerome was very much a New York man, part of that period of American history known as the Gilded Age. New York was his power base, his home. There he spent money on supporting the arts, on building race tracks and mansions.
The Jerome Mansion on the corner of Madison Avenue and 26th Street had a six-hundred-seat theatre, a breakfast room which seated seventy people, a ballroom of white and gold with champagne and cologne-spouting fountains!
His wife's needs were different. While a recognized beauty of the Gilded Age, she suffered from a degree of insecurity. Her sole goal, a biographer tartly recorded, was to ensure that each of her daughters married nobly and lucratively.
In 1867, Clara and her three daughters sailed for Europe, starting the next stage in our story.
Jim Belshaw's email is ndarala@optusnet.com. His New England life blog is http://newenglandaustralia.blogspot.com/: his New England history blog http://newenglandhistory.blogspot.com.au/