The Mail on Sunday

We kid you not! Kate really does descend from goat breeders (but very posh ones)

- By Claudia Joseph

IT WAS an unusual admission for a future Queen. On an official visit last week to a farm near the Welsh town of Abergavenn­y, the Duchess of Cambridge let slip a little-known snippet about her pedigree – she is descended from a goat farmer.

‘I was looking into my ancestry and there was someone there who was a rare-breed goat farmer,’ she said on a tour of Pant Farm, Llanvether­ine, which supplies goat milk from its herd to a local cheesemake­r. ‘I’ll have to find out which one it was. It was just after the First World War.’

Now The Mail on Sunday has done the work for Kate – and we can today reveal that she is indeed descended from a goat-breeder – though her forebears were hardly horny-handed toilers in the fields.

In fact, her goat-loving relatives are the former Lady Mayoress of Leeds, Dr Elinor Lupton, and her sister Elizabeth, who ran a herd of rare-breed goats at Beechwood, a Georgian mansion in Roundhay, seven miles north of Leeds.

The unmarried sisters were first cousins to Kate’s paternal greatgrand­mother Olive Lupton and her sister Anne. Olive and her children,

including Kate’s grandfathe­r Peter Middleton, regularly visited Beechwood Estate and its home farm with the famous rare breed of goats.

Elinor, who inherited the Beechwood estate after all three of Olive Middleton’s brothers died in the First World War, shared her love of animal husbandry with her friend Princess Mary, the only daughter of King George V and Queen Mary and the aunt of the current Queen, who lived nearby at the Harewood estate with her husband Henry Lascelles, 6th Earl of Harewood.

Historian Michael Reed said: ‘Kate is absolutely related to goat breeders. Farming and the land are in her blood. Her great-grandmothe­r Olive Middleton’s first cousins won awards from the Royal Agricultur­al Society for their expertise in rare goat breeding in the years between the world wars.’

The family house at the Beechwood estate was central to the lives of the Lupton clan – and to the Middletons once Olive Lupton had married Kate’s great-grandfathe­r, solicitor Richard Noel Middleton.

In his family memoir The Next Generation, Kate’s grandfathe­r

Peter Middleton wrote: ‘We were somewhat in awe of our cousins Elinor and Bessie [Elizabeth]. Visits to them at Beechwood were always rather special occasions before which my mother held careful inspection­s for dirt behind the ears, clean hankies etc. An even

greater ordeal was the annual Beechwood Party, for which I still remember the horrors of trying to tie a black bow tie for my first dinner jacket. Nor will I forget my terror of Elinor and Bessie’s aunt, Lady Bryce.’

The tragedy of the three brothers being killed in the First World War meant Kate’s great-grandmothe­r Olive and her spinster sister Anne shared their father’s £70,538 inheritanc­e, the equivalent of £5million today.

Much of the Lupton family wealth ended up in a trust fund for Olive’s four children and their descendant­s – which paid for Kate and her siblings Pippa and James to be privately educated.

The young Middletons did not, however, inherit the goat herd, which was given to another farmer after Elinor died in 1979, aged 92.

‘Farming and the land are in her blood’

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 ?? ?? CONNECTED: Kate and goats last week and, right, in her country gear. Left: Elinor Lupton with uniformed Princess Mary
CONNECTED: Kate and goats last week and, right, in her country gear. Left: Elinor Lupton with uniformed Princess Mary

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