When impoverished aristocrat Lady Charlotte Bertie married wealthy Welsh
ironmaster John Guest of Dowlais in 1833, her relatives looked on with
dismay. Yet despite their vast difference of background and age, over
their nineteen-year long marriage, husband and wife enjoyed great
happiness and much adventure. There would be ten children and while John
built up an immense commercial empire, Charlotte championed Welsh
culture.
Crucially, she taught herself John's business from the inside. Over the
years, she made the keenest observation of iron production, the
fluctuations of the trade and the engineering innovations that touched
upon its developments. When John died in 1852, she was therefore
uniquely well-placed to succeed him as head of the works - a remarkable
position for a Victorian woman. Not only did she endeavor to introduce
reforms, but also - rather to her dismay - had to weather a potentially
destructive strike.
But success came at a price. With her star to all sight in the
ascendant, Lady Charlotte suddenly chose to abandon all, leave Wales and
marry her sons' tutor. This book traces the ardent, creative years of
her first marriage, explores her determination - widowed - to preserve
John's legacy, and observes her growing devotion to the scholarly
Charles Schreiber.