The Right Honourable
The Earl Bathurst
Coat of Arms of Lord Bathurst.
PredecessorHenry Bathurst, 8th Earl Bathurst
BornAllen Christopher Bertram Bathurst
(1961-03-11) 11 March 1961
Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England
Spouse(s)
Hilary George
(m. 1986; div. 1994)
    Sara Chapman
    (m. 1996)
    IssueBenjamin Bathurst, Lord Apsley
    Lady Rosie Bathurst
    ParentsHenry Bathurst, 8th Earl Bathurst
    Judith Mary Nelson

    Allen Christopher Bertram Bathurst, 9th Earl Bathurst (born 11 March 1961), known as Lord Apsley until 2011, is a British peer, landowner, and conservationist.

    Life

    The son of Henry Bathurst, 8th Earl Bathurst, and his wife Judith Mary Nelson, he was styled as Lord Apsley from birth.[1][2]

    By 1999 he was living at Cirencester House in Gloucestershire.[1] From there he administers the Bathurst estate of some 15,500 acres in Gloucestershire and Wiltshire. It includes much of the villages of Sapperton and Coates, Pinbury Park, and the principal source of the River Thames. Within the estate is the Ivy Lodge polo ground, home of Cirencester Park Polo Club.[3] Bathurst is also farmer of the Cirencester Park Farms.[4]

    On 16 October 2011, he succeeded his father as Earl Bathurst (1772), Baron Bathurst of Battlesden (1712), and Lord Apsley (1771), all in the peerage of Great Britain.[5]

    In 2018 he was living with his wife Sara at Cirencester House, the family seat.[3]

    Bathurst is active in the National Farmers Union and is the founding Director of the annual Cotswold Country Show, held every July on his estate. He is a past governor of the Royal Agricultural University, a director of the Gloucestershire Farming Trust, and a past President of the Three Counties Agricultural Society.[6][5]

    Bathurst is President of the Gloucestershire Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group, Cirencester Housing, Cirencester Park Polo Club, and the Cirencester Hospital League of Friends, the Cirencester Band, and the Cirencester Male Voice Choir. He is Marshal of the St Lawrence Hospital Trust. He is Patron of the Cotswolds Museum Trust; Steward of the Cirencester Society in London; and Patron of the Cirencester Cricket Club.[6]

    Personal life

    In 1986, as Lord Apsley, he married firstly Hilary Jane George, daughter of John F. George; they were divorced in 1994, having had two children:[1][2]

    • Benjamin George Henry Bathurst, Lord Apsley (born 1990) m. Sara Kushma and has one son, Theodore (b.2023)
    • Hon. Rosie Meriel Lilias Bathurst (born 1992)

    On 5 June 1995, at Cirencester, he married secondly Sara L. Chapman, daughter of Christopher and Marguerite Chapman of Ilminster, Somerset.[1][2]

    In February 1993, he was convicted of drink-driving.[7]

    When Gloucestershire County Council planned to demolish a historic building in the cattle market at Cirencester, built by the 6th Earl Bathurst, to make way for a Leisure Centre, Lord and Lady Apsley made headline news when they threatened to chain themselves to the building to prevent the demolition. Bathurst later negotiated to buy the building and had it removed, brick by brick, and rebuilt on his own land.

    References

    1. 1 2 3 4 Peter W. Hammond, ed., The Complete Peerage, Volume XIV (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998), page 73
    2. 1 2 3 Burke's Peerage, volume 1 (2003), page 215
    3. 1 2 Eleanor Doughty, "Big enough to be stately, small enough to be cosy", The Sunday Telegraph, 8 November 2018, accessed 18 February 2023, via PressReader
    4. CIRENCESTER PARK FARMS LIMITED Company number 00730539: Officers, gov.uk, accessed 18 February 2023
    5. 1 2 "Bathurst, 9th Earl cr. 1772 (Allen Christopher Bertram Bathurst) (Baron Bathurst, 1712; Baron Apsley, 1771)", Who's Who, online edition, 1 December 2022, accessed 18 February 2023 (subscription required)
    6. 1 2 Alan Shelley, [https://web.archive.org/web/20120425082223/http://www.freemen-few.org.uk/public/Cart/Products/CategoryProducts.aspx?CategoryID=47 "Our patron", freemen-few.org.uk, October 2011, accessed 18 February 2023
    7. -title "Peer convicted", The Independent, 22 October 2011
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