Seymour Fleming
A painting (1775/6) by Joshua Reynolds of Lady Worsley in a riding habit adapted from the uniform of her husband's regiment; now at Harewood House
Born
Seymour Dorothy Fleming

(1758-10-05)5 October 1758
Died9 September 1818(1818-09-09) (aged 59)
Passy, Paris, France
Burial placePère Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France
Spouses
(m. 1775; died 1805)
    John Lewis Cuchet
    (m. 1805)
    ChildrenCharlotte Dorothy Hammond (née Cochard)
    with Worsley:
    Robert Edwin Worsley
    with Maurice George Bisset:
    Jane Seymour Worsley (ill.)
    Parent(s)Sir John Fleming, 1st Baronet
    Jane Coleman
    RelativesJane Stanhope, Countess of Harrington (sister)

    Seymour Dorothy Fleming (5 October 1758 – 9 September 1818), styled Lady Worsley from 1775 to 1805, was a member of the British gentry, notable for her involvement in a high-profile criminal conversation trial.

    Early life and family

    Fleming was the younger daughter and coheir of the Irish-born Sir John Fleming, 1st Baronet (d. 1763), of Brompton Park (aka Hale House, Cromwell House),[1][2] Middlesex, and his wife, Jane Coleman (d. 1811). She was probably named after her maternal grandmother, Jane Seymour, a daughter of Sir Edward Seymour, 5th Baronet.

    Her father and two of her sisters died when she was five, and she and her surviving sister were then brought up by their mother, who remarried in 1770 to Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood,[3] a rich sexagenarian whose wealth derived from sugar plantations in the West Indies.[4] Her elder sister, Jane Stanhope, Countess of Harrington, was noted for being an "epitome of virtue".[5]

    Marriage to Worsley

    The counterpart (or pendant) painting of her husband Sir Richard Worsley, 7th Baronet

    On 20 September 1775, at the age of 17, Seymour Fleming married Sir Richard Worsley, 7th Baronet of Appuldurcombe House, Isle of Wight, and was styled Lady Worsley until her death. She was rumoured to have been worth £70,000 upon her marriage, but in truth brought £52,000 to the union[3] (equivalent to £7,057,700 in 2021).

    The couple were badly suited to each other, and the marriage began to fall apart shortly after it began. They had one child, a son named Robert Edwin[6] who died young.[7] In August 1781 Seymour bore a second child, Jane Seymour Worsley, fathered by Maurice George Bisset but claimed by Worsley as his own to avoid scandal. Bisset, a captain in the South Hampshire militia, had been Worsley's close friend and neighbour at Knighton Gorges on the Isle of Wight.[8]

    Cartoon by James Gillray: "Sir Richard Worse-than-sly, exposing his wife's bottom; – o fye!"

    Lady Worsley was rumoured to have had 27 lovers.[3] In November 1781 she ran off with Bisset, and in February 1782 Worsley brought a criminal conversation case against Bisset for £20,000 (equivalent to £2,615,600 in 2021). Lady Worsley turned the suit in her favour with scandalous revelations and the aid of past and present lovers; and questioned the legal status of her husband. She included a number of testimonies from her lovers and her doctor, William Osborn, who related that she had suffered from a venereal disease which she had contracted from the Marquess of Graham. It was alleged that Worsley had displayed his wife naked to Bisset at the bath house in Maidstone. This testimony destroyed Worsley's suit and the jury awarded him only one shilling (2015: £5.54) in damages.[3]

    Bisset eventually left Lady Worsley when it became apparent that Worsley was seeking separation rather than divorce, meaning Seymour could not remarry until Worsley's death. Seymour was forced to become a professional mistress or demimondaine and live off the donations of rich men in order to survive, joining other upper-class women in a similar position in the New Female Coterie.[9] She had two more children: another by Bisset after he left her in 1783, whose fate is unknown; and a fourth, Charlotte Dorothy Hammond (née Cochard), who she sent to be raised by a family in the Ardennes.[10]

    Lady Worsley later left for Paris in order to avoid her debts. In 1788, she and her new lover, the composer, conductor and champion fencer Joseph Bologne, the Chevalier de Saint-Georges, returned to England, and her estranged husband entered into articles of separation, on the condition she spend four years in exile in France.[11] Eight months before the expiration of this exile, she was unable to leave France because of the events of the French Revolution and she was probably imprisoned during the Reign of Terror,[12] meaning she was abroad on the death of her and Worsley's son in 1793. In early 1797, she returned to England, and she then suffered a severe two-month illness. Owing to the forgiveness of her mother, her sister and her sister's husband, the Earl of Harrington, she was then able to move into Brompton Park, her previous home, but which the laws on property prevented her from officially holding.[13]

    Later life

    On Worsley's death in 1805,[14] her £70,000 jointure reverted to her and just over a month later, on 12 September, at the age of 47 she married 26-year-old[15] newfound lover John Lewis Cuchet (d. 1836) at Farnham.[16] Also that month, by royal licence, she officially resumed her maiden name of Fleming, and her new husband also took it. After the armistice of 1814 ended the War of the Sixth Coalition, the couple moved to a villa at Passy where she died in 1818, aged 59.[17] She is buried at the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.

    In the 2015 BBC2 television film, The Scandalous Lady W, based upon Hallie Rubenhold's book Lady Worsley's Whim, she was played by Natalie Dormer.[18]

    References

    1. Lysons 1795, pp. 170–230.
    2. Walker 2014.
    3. 1 2 3 4 "The Life of Lady Worsley". Harewood House. 14 August 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
    4. Newton, Grace (7 May 2019). "How Harewood House in Yorkshire was built with the profits of slavery". www.yorkshirepost.co.uk. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
    5. "After Joshua Reynolds, PORTRAIT OF JANE, COUNTESS OF HARRINGTON WITH HER SONS, LORD PETERSHAM 1780-1851 AND THE HON LINCOLN STANHOPE 1781-1840, Circa 1890". Cider House Galleries. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
    6. Rubenhold 2011, p. 33.
    7. Rubenhold 2011, p. 246.
    8. Rubenhold 2011, p. 43.
    9. Rubenhold 2011, pp. 171–183.
    10. Rubenhold 2011, p. 226.
    11. Rubenhold 2011, p. 243.
    12. Rubenhold 2011, p. 245.
    13. Rubenhold 2011, p. 244.
    14. Sheppard1975, pp. 3–8.
    15. "Lady Worsley: the real woman behind the sex scandal". The Week UK.
    16. Rubenhold 2011, p. 249.
    17. Rubenhold 2011, p. 265.
    18. "BBC Two - The Scandalous Lady W - Seymour, Lady Worsley". BBC. Retrieved 19 October 2019.

    Bibliography

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