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Sir John Carew Pole gave the house and formal gardens into the care of the National Trust in 1961, on the understanding that the family could continue to reside there. Sir Tremayne Carew Pole, 14th Baronet, and his wife Charlotte currently live there with their two children. The house and gardens are open to the public between March and October.
Sir Tremayne John Carew Pole, 14th Baronet (b. 1974), who married Charlotte Louise Campbell Watkins and had issue. John Alexander George Carew Pole (b. 1975), who married Rebecca Wood in 2003 and had issue. Sir Richard Carew Pole died at home in Cornwall, on 1 December 2024, one day shy of his 86th birthday. [3]
Charlotte Louise Campbell Carew Pole, Lady Carew Pole (née Watkins), is a British women's rights advocate and Conservative political activist. She is the director of Daughters' Rights, a political campaign advocating for the end of male primogeniture in the British peerage and baronetage and for women to have hereditary seats in the House of Lords.
Sir John Richard Walter Reginald Carew Pole, 13th Baronet (1938–2024) [9] [10] Sir Tremayne John Carew Pole, 14th Baronet (born 1974) The heir apparent is the present baronet's son, Lucian William Patrick (born 2016).
1855: William Henry Pole-Carew, of East Antony [121] or Antony House [122] 1856: Sir William Berkeley Call, [123] of Whiteford [122] 1857: Sir Henry Onslow, 3rd Baronet, of Hengar [122] 1858: John Francis Buller, of Morval [122] [124] 1859: John Hearle Tremayne, of Heligan [122] 1860: Humphrey Willyams, of Carnanton [122] 1861: John Francis ...
Sir John Carew Pole, 12th Baronet; Sir Richard Carew Pole, 13th Baronet This page was last edited on 5 December 2024, at 21:21 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
In 1832 the county of Cornwall, in south west England, was split for parliamentary purposes into two county divisions.These were the East division (with a place of election at Bodmin) and West Cornwall (where voting took place at Truro).
Agar-Robartes was born at Grosvenor Place, London, the son of Thomas Agar-Robartes, 1st Baron Robartes, [1] and Juliana Pole-Carew, daughter of Reginald Pole-Carew, of East Antony, Cornwall. [2] He was educated at Harrow and Christ Church, Oxford, and was called to the Bar at the Middle Temple in 1870. [1]