Scottish Daily Mail

Faces of tragic Britons killed in Italy quake

- From Emily Kent Smith and Silvia Marchetti in Italy

SMILING and carefree, these are the British victims of the earthquake that has devastated Italy.

Maria and Will Henniker-Gotley were staying in their holiday home, purchased and lovingly renovated by Mrs HennikerGo­tley’s late father some ten years ago.

But in the early hours of Wednesday morning, the eight-bedroom farmhouse in Sommati that they were sharing with another family came crashing to the ground.

The couple’s children Francesca and Jack, aged 12 and 14, have been orphaned after the earthquake that ripped through the village, 1.3 miles from the worst-hit town of Amatrice, turning the property into a pile of rubble.

Mrs Henniker-Gotley, 51, was a finance manager for the Londonbase­d Children and Arts charity. Her 55-year-old husband – believed to be an Oxford graduate – was a consultant.

Staying with the couple, from south London, were their friends Anne-Louise and Simon Burnett, whose 14-year-old son Marcos died in the tragedy.

His parents and sister were injured and were last night being treated in hospital.

Mrs Henniker-Gotley’s cousin Carlo Taliani, 38, who owns a restaurant in a nearby village, said he received a call informing him that the family – who had come to see him just days earlier – were dead.

He said the couple had loved returning to the village where Mrs Henniker-Gotley’s father Sante, was from. Sante named the holiday home Villa Olivia after his late wife.

Mr Taliani, who is housing many of the homeless in a makeshift tent on his land, said the house was renovated in a very British manner, despite its rural Italian location.

He said: ‘She (Mrs HennikerGo­tley) moved a lot between London and here. She liked it because of her roots.’

He said the family were known to locals for doing traditiona­l British things such as having afternoon tea.

Mr Taliani learned of the tragedy after Mrs Henniker-Gotley’s sister called a mutual friend and asked him to collect her from Rome airport so she could care for her orphaned niece and nephew.

He said he was surprised the home was flattened as it was renovated fairly recently, adding: ‘You would not have expected it to crumble like that – you would have thought that they would have been able to get out.’

Marcos, along with Jack, was a pupil at £6,500-a-term Wetherby School in Notting Hill, west London, where Princes William and Harry studied and the Beckhams’ children also attend.

Yesterday the school’s headmaster Nick Baker paid tribute to Marcos as an ‘utterly charming’ boy. He added: ‘He was quick-witted, always had a smile on his face and wanted to be involved in everything. He was a friend to all and a credit to his school and family.’

The Queen has made an undisclose­d donation to the British Red Cross to support rescue efforts in the area. Her Majesty and the Duke of Edinburgh said their ‘thoughts and prayers’ were with the victims.

 ?? DEAD ?? Maria and Will Henniker-Gotley: Their two children have been orphaned
DEAD Maria and Will Henniker-Gotley: Their two children have been orphaned
 ??  ?? A family torn apart: Simon and Anne-Louise Burnett lost their 14-year-old son Marcos, right
A family torn apart: Simon and Anne-Louise Burnett lost their 14-year-old son Marcos, right
 ??  ?? Destructio­n: The house where the three Britons died
Destructio­n: The house where the three Britons died
 ??  ?? DEAD
DEAD

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