Captain William George ("Bay") Middleton (16 April 1846 – 9 April 1892) was a noted British horseman and an officer of the Royal Lancers. He was equerry to John Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. When Empress Elisabeth of Austria hunted in Britain, he was her pilot. He was described as "one of the best riders to hounds that ever lived, an amusing dare-devil and very good company."[1]
His nickname "Bay" was either a reference to his reddish-brown hair, or derived from the name of the winner of The Derby winner in 1836.
Biography
Early life and career
William George Middleton was born at Barony, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, the son of George Middleton, Esq. and Mary Margaret Hamilton. He was born into a Scottish family, with sporting traditions, a scion of the Clan Middleton. He attended the Glasgow Academy. The family having moved to London, he was privately tutored at Wimbledon.[2]
Middleton was gazetted to the 12th Lancers in 1865, and stationed in Cahir in County Tipperary. He rode his first Winning Race in 1867 at Cork Park. He joined the Lord Lieutenant's staff as an aide-de-camp in 1870, where he was based at the Viceregal Lodge in Dublin, was promoted to captain and left services. Middleton was one of the best and most popular riders in the United Kingdom. He repeatedly rode the winners over the stiffest steeplechase courses, including the Punchestown (Ireland) Grand National. Besides being distinguished as a horseman, he was a good cricketer, belonging to the Jockey Cricket Club.
Sisi
The Empress Elisabeth of Austria ("Sisi") visited England, arriving on 2 August 1874, where she met The Earl Spencer. When she returned to England in 1876, she visited Lord Spencer at Althorp, and Bay Middleton was asked to "pilot" the Empress. She left England in February 1882 and never hunted in England or Ireland again.
Marriage
In 1875, Middleton became engaged to Charlotte Baird, daughter of William Baird, Esq. of Elie House, Elie, Fife, whom he married on 25 October 1882, at St. George's, Hanover Square. The couple had one daughter, Violet Georgiana, born in 1886.[3][4]
Death
Captain William George Middleton died a week before his 46th birthday in the Midland Sportsman's Cup at Lord Willoughby de Broke's estate at Kineton, killed in a fall from his horse at the Parliamentary steeplechase. He was buried in full riding costume at Haselbech, Northamptonshire. His coffin was kept in the parish church, covered with the Union Jack and flanked with lances of the 12th Lancers, Middleton's regiment. A large assembly of mourners gathered to attend the funeral service, which was conducted by the Rev. W. Lloyd, the rector. Among the mourners were the widow and the deceased's only (officially acknowledged) child, a little girl of six. Earl Spencer, Lord and Lady Willoughby de Broke, Sir Saville Crossley, M.P., Mr. Albert Pell, Captain Atherton, Mr. Charles. W. B. Fernie, General Le Quesne, and many others who were well known in the hunting field also attended Middleton's funeral.
Extra-marital fatherhood
Middleton had an 18-month affair with Lady (Henrietta) Blanche Ogilvy, while she was married to Colonel Henry Hozier. She confided in a letter (made public in August 2002 by her granddaughter, Mary Soames) to another lover that Bay Middleton was the father of her daughter, Clementine Hozier, born 1 April 1885, who was eventually to marry Sir Winston Churchill. However, another writer, Joan Hardwick, had speculated that Clementine had been fathered by Algernon Bertram Mitford (1837–1916): Lady Soames dismissed such earlier speculation as "based on anecdote and gossip", which was, unlike the paternity of Middleton, undocumented.
In ballet and literature
Middleton appears as the Empress's lover in Kenneth MacMillan's ballet Mayerling.
Middleton's courtship of Charlotte Baird and his relationship with the Empress are the focus of Daisy Goodwin's novel The Fortune Hunter.
Notes
- ↑ Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes. Baily bros. 1921. p. 141.
- ↑ "Empress of Austria - Bay Middleton". www.mkheritage.org.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
- ↑ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
- ↑ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 30 September 2014.