Spencer-Stanhope family

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Cannon Hall, home of the Spencer-Stanhope family for 200 years

Spencer-Stanhope is the family name of British landed gentry who for 200 years held Cannon Hall, a country house in South Yorkshire that since the 1950s has been a museum. The hyphenated form of the name is more common in British orthography, but American sources often omit the hyphen and alphabetize by "Stanhope."

19th century[]

Throughout the 19th and early 20th century, several family members (by birth and marriage) were active in the art world. They were related through John Spencer Stanhope (1787–1873), a classical antiquarian, writer, and explorer, and his wife, Lady Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Coke of Norfolk, 1st Earl of Leicester. John Spencer Stanhope was the son of industrialist Walter Spencer-Stanhope (1749–1822). The couple died in 1873 within a few days of each other; she on 31 October, he on 7 November. They had six children:

  • Gertrude Spencer-Stanhope, a Pre-Raphaelite painter and sculptor, including of church works
  • Cecily Spencer-Stanhope, helped her father to create the Fairylands part of the grounds of Cannon Hall
  • Eliza Anne (d. 1859), who married the Rev. Richard St. John Tyrwhitt of Oxford.
  • Anne Alicia.
  • Louisa Elizabeth (1832–1867).

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