Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild

The Right Honourable
The Lord Rothschild
FRS
Member of Parliament
for Aylesbury
In office
1899–1910
Preceded by Ferdinand James von Rothschild
Succeeded by Lionel Nathan de Rothschild
Personal details
Born Lionel Walter Rothschild
8 February 1868
London, United Kingdom
Died 27 August 1937 (1937-08-28) (aged 69)
Tring, United Kingdom
Religion Judaism

Lionel Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild, Baron de Rothschild,[1] FRS[2][3] (8 February 1868 – 27 August 1937), was a British banker, politician, zoologist and a scion of the Rothschild family.

Biography

Walter Rothschild was born in London as the eldest son and heir of Emma Louise von Rothschild and Nathan Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild, an immensely-wealthy financier of the international Rothschild financial dynasty and the first Jewish peer in England.[4]

The eldest of three children, Walter was deemed to have delicate health and was educated at home. As a young man, he traveled in Europe, attending the university at Bonn for a year before entering Magdalene College at Cambridge. In 1889, leaving Cambridge after two years, he was required to go into the family banking business to study finance.

At the age of seven, he declared that he would run a zoological museum, and as a child, he collected insects, butterflies, and other animals. Among his pets at the family home in Tring Park were kangaroos and exotic birds. As a boy, Rothschild was once dragged off his horse and assaulted by workmen while on a hunting ride near Tring, an experience that he personally attributed to Anti-Semitism.[5]

At 21, he reluctantly went to work at the family bank, N M Rothschild & Sons in London. He worked there from 1889 to 1908. Нe evidently lacked any interest or ability in the financial profession, but it was not until 1908 that he was finally allowed to give it up. However, his parents established a zoological museum as a compensation, and footed the bill for expeditions all over the world to seek out animals.

Rothschild was 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) tall, suffered from a speech impediment and was very shy, but he had his photograph taken riding on a giant tortoise, and drove a carriage harnessed to six zebras to Buckingham Palace to prove that zebras could be tamed.

Though he never married, Rothschild had two mistresses, one of whom bore him a daughter.[6]

Zoological career

Rothschild with his famed zebra (Equus burchelli) carriage, which he drove to Buckingham Palace to demonstrate the tame character of zebras to the public
Lord Rothschild on a giant tortoise

Rothschild studied zoology at Magdalene College, Cambridge.[7] Meeting Albert Günther sparked his interest in the taxonomy of birds and butterflies.

Although Rothschild himself travelled and collected in Europe and North Africa for many years, his work and health concerns limited his range, and beginning while at Cambridge he employed others - explorers, professional collectors, and residents - to collect for him in remote and little-known parts of the world. He also hired taxidermists, a librarian, and, most importantly, professional scientists to work with him to curate and write up the resulting collections: Ernst Hartert, for birds, from 1892 until his retirement at the age of 70 in 1930; and Karl Jordan for entomology, from 1893 until Rothschild's death in 1937.

At its largest, Rothschild's collection included 300,000 bird skins, 200,000 birds' eggs, 2,250,000 butterflies, and 30,000 beetles, as well as thousands of specimens of mammals, reptiles, and fishes. They formed the largest zoological collection ever amassed by a private individual.

The Rothschild giraffe (Giraffa camelopardis rothschildi), a subspecies with five ossicones instead of two, was named after him. Another 153 insects, 58 birds, 17 mammals, three fish, three spiders, two reptiles, one millipede, and one worm also carry his name.

Rothschild opened his private museum in 1892. It housed one of the largest natural history collections in the world, and was open to the public. In 1932 he was forced to sell the vast majority of his bird collection to the American Museum of Natural History after being blackmailed by a former mistress.[8][9] On his death in 1937, the museum and all its contents were given in his will to the British Museum (of which the Natural History Museum, London was then a part), the greatest accession which that institution has ever received.[10] The Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum at Tring is now a division of the Natural History Museum.[11]

Following a visit to Hungary in 1902, Rothschild brought six live edible dormice (Glis glis) back to Tring. Some of them escaped and started breeding successfully in the wild. They have now become a localised pest over an area of approximately 200 square miles in a triangle between Luton, Aylesbury and Beaconsfield; there are estimated to be at least 10,000 of them. Even though considered an invasive species, they are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, 1981.[12]

Rothschild was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Giessen in 1898, was elected a Trustee of the British Museum in 1899, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1911.[2][3]

Political career

Rothschild caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair, 1900

Walter Rothschild was a Conservative Member of Parliament for Aylesbury from 1899 until he retired from politics at the January 1910 general election.[10]

Military activities

Despite his health, Rothschild served part-time as an officer in a Territorial Army unit, the Royal Buckinghamshire Yeomanry, where he was a captain from July 1902,[13] promoted to major in 1903 and retiring in 1909.[14]

Zionism and the Balfour Declaration

Further information: Balfour Declaration

As an active Zionist and close friend of Chaim Weizmann, he worked to formulate the draft declaration for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. On 2 November 1917 he received a letter from the British foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour, addressed to his London home at 148 Piccadilly. In this letter the British government declared its support for the establishment in Palestine of "a national home for the Jewish people". This letter became known as the Balfour Declaration.

Peerage

Walter inherited the British peerage title "Baron Rothschild" from his father Nathan Mayer Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild in 1915. He died in 1937 at Tring Park, Hertfordshire aged 69, and was buried in Willesden Jewish Cemetery, London. He had no legitimate children, and his younger brother Charles Rothschild had predeceased him, so the title was inherited by his nephew (Nathaniel Mayer) Victor Rothschild.

He also inherited the title "Baron de Rothschild" (Freiherr von Rothschild) of the Austrian nobility, which was an authorized title in the United Kingdom by Warrant of 27 April 1932.[15] In 1838, Queen Victoria had authorized the use of this Austrian title in the United Kingdom.[1]

Styles of address

  1. Although The Lord Rothschild was a baronet, by custom the post-nominal of "Bt" is omitted, as Peers of the Realm do not list subsidiary hereditary titles.

Ancestry[16]

See also

Publications

References

  1. 1 2 Bulletins of State Intelligence, 1838, p. 220
  2. 1 2 "Fellows 1660-2007" (PDF). Royal Society. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  3. 1 2 Jordan, K. (1938). "Lord Rothschild. 1868-1937". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 2 (6): 385–326. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1938.0023.
  4. Pen Ultimate / Sticking my neck out - Haaretz - Israel News
  5. "The House of Rothschild: The world's banker, 1849-1999", Niall Ferguson. Penguin, 2000. ISBN 0-14-028662-4, ISBN 978-0-14-028662-5
  6. Hannah Rothschild, "The Butterfly Effect", Bonhams Magazine, Spring 2009, pages 18-21.
  7. "Rothschild, the Hon. Lionel Walter (RTST887LW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. Naish, Darren (17 February 2006). "Walter Rothschild and the rise and fall of Sclater's cassowary". Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  9. Barrow, Mark V. (2000) A Passion for Birds. Princeton University Press. p. 192
  10. 1 2 "Rothschild, Lionel Walter". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35843. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  11. Thackray, J. and Press, B. 2001. The Natural History Museum: Nature's Treasurehouse. NHM Publishers, London, 144 pp.
  12. Pest Magazine (PDF): 16–17. Jan–Feb 2010 http://www.pestmagazine.co.uk/media/246068/16-17-dormice.pdf. Retrieved 17 September 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. The London Gazette: no. 27454. p. 4515. 15 July 1902.
  14. Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes. Kelly's. 1916. p. 1276.
  15. Foreign Titles in the UK - www.heraldica.org
  16. https://www.rothschildarchive.org/genealogy/

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Ferdinand James de Rothschild
Member of Parliament for Aylesbury
1899–1910
Succeeded by
Lionel Nathan de Rothschild
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Nathan Mayer Rothschild
Baron Rothschild
1915–1937
Succeeded by
Victor Rothschild
Titles of nobility
of the Austrian Empire
Preceded by
Nathan Mayer Rothschild
Baron de Rothschild
1915–1937
Succeeded by
Victor Rothschild
(non-authorized)
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