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Sir Anselm Guise, 6th Baronet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elmore Court, seen through
its main gates

Sir Anselm William Edward Guise, 6th Baronet (18 September 1888 – 12 September 1970) was an English soldier, landowner, and magistrate, of Elmore Court, Gloucester.

He was High Sheriff of Gloucestershire in 1926.[1]

Life

Guise was the son of Sir William Francis George Guise, 5th Baronet, by his marriage to Ada Caroline Coope, and was educated at Eton. During the First World War, he was commissioned into the Gloucestershire Yeomanry and rose to the rank of captain.[2]

On 17 January 1920, he succeeded his father in the Guise baronetcy, created for an ancestor in 1783.[2] His father left him an estate of 623 acres (252 ha), part of the manor of Elmore[3] which in 1262 had been granted to their ancestor Anselm de Gyse by John of Burgh, a son of Hubert de Burgh, 1st Earl of Kent, after Anselm had married a cousin of Burgh's.[4] [5] Within a few months of inheriting the estate, Guise sold much of it, while keeping Elmore Court and a home farm, and also Lassington Wood, which he soon gave to Gloucester County Borough Council, to celebrate the Guise family's long association with the city.[3]

Guise also inherited an art collection, and in 1921 he sold Francesco Botticini‘s painting “Madonna Adoring the Christ Child”, which had belonged to his mother's family, the Coopes.[6]

In 1922 Guise was commissioned as a Justice of the Peace for Gloucestershire, and in 1926 was “pricked” (appointed) as High Sheriff of the county.[2]

On 23 January 1924, Guise married Nina Margaret Sophie Grant, a daughter of Sir James Augustus Grant, first (and last) Baronet, and they had three children, Philippa Margaret (born 1926), John Grant (1927–2007), later 7th Baronet, and Christopher James Guise (born 1930), later 8th Baronet.[2] Their daughter Philippa married Alastair Hugh Joseph Fraser, of Moniack Castle, the eldest son of Major Alastair Fraser and Lady Sibyl Grimston. Between 1951 and 1964 they had four sons and two daughters.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ The London Gazette, Issue 33143, 19 March 1926, p. 2012
  2. ^ a b c d Burke’s Peerage, volume 2 (2003), p. 1703
  3. ^ a b The Gardeners' Chronicle: A Weekly Illustrated Journal of Horticulture and Allied Subjects (Gardeners’ Chronicle, 1921), p. 13
  4. ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, Vol. 20, p. 469
  5. ^ “Churcham: Introduction” in Victoria County History of Gloucestershire, vol. 10, pp. 11–17
  6. ^ Title: Madonna Adoring the Christ Child at mappingpaintings.org, accessed 25 May 2020
  7. ^ Burke’s Peerage, volume 2 (2003), p. 2414

External links

Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by
William Francis Guise
Baronet
(of Highnam)
1920–1970
Succeeded by
John Grant Guise
This page was last edited on 14 March 2023, at 07:10
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