It was the home of a knight, a baron, a viscount, two marquises and nine
earls. The family had estates not only in South Yorkshire, but also in
North Yorkshire, the Midlands and Ireland, at their greatest extent
covering nearly 120,000 acres. One head of household was beheaded.
Another saw one of the last wolves in the British Isles. One owner built
the Palladian mansion at Wentworth, which has the longest frontage of
any country mansion in Britain, and was one of the earliest growers of
pineapples in this country. One head of family was prime minister.
Twice. Another provided financial assistance to more than 6,000 of his
Irish tenants and their families to emigrate to Canada during the Great
Famine. Another had a christening attended by 7,000 official guests. Yet
another bought an ocean liner to go and search for buried treasure in
the Pacific.
This copiously illustrated book explores the history of the house, the
estate and the family over more than 400 years, drawing on a wide
variety of sources, particularly the family records (the Wentworth
Woodhouse Muniments) held in Sheffield Archives.