The Scottish Mail on Sunday

At Braemar again... and one is very amused!

- By Fiona McWhirter and Jim Lawson

SHE may be only days away from becoming the longest reigning monarch in British history, but yesterday the Queen showed she was not going to be diverted from her regular routine.

Along with the Duke of Edinburgh and the Prince of Wales, she attended the Braemar Gathering on Royal Deeside.

She first attended as a seven-year-old in 1933 and has been virtually every year since coming to the throne in 1952.

The Royal party, which also included the Queen’s grandson Peter Phillips and his wife Autumn, watched the tug o’ war attentivel­y – then laughed and chuckled at the children’s sack race.

Braemar Royal Highland Society secretary William Meston said: ‘It’s absolutely fantastic that it’s a landmark year for the Queen and we’re very proud to have her as patron.’

THEY may be the occupants of the oldest house in the country, but they are certainly thoroughly at ease with modern life.

Renowned for their bohemian arts fair, not to mention a 30-year age gap, Lord and Lady St Germans are getting well into the swing of the 21st Century – to judge from her Instagram account, at least.

Take the image of a young male reveller supping from a golden slipper on her site. Or the giant swan statue which, she tells her followers, turns pink ‘in party mode’.

It is just a few weeks since the 10th Earl and his wife boasted of flying a specialist chef several thousand miles from Hawaii to supervise a trendy ‘detox’ diet.

Which, one imagines, comes at quite a price – as does maintainin­g the extraordin­ary Port Eliot house in Cornwall, parts of which go back to the 10th Century and which houses paintings by Sir Joshua Reynolds and van Dyck.

So it will be a huge disappoint­ment to the 74-year-old Earl and his 45-year-old wife to learn that their high-profile bid for a financial lifeline has been dashed by his friend, the Prince of Wales.

The Mail on Sunday has establishe­d that The Prince’s Foundation for Building Community has rejected a prominent appeal by the Earl to invest an estimated £10 million in the ancestral seat, widely believed to be the oldest continuous­ly inhabited house in the country.

The Earl, Peregrine Eliot and his third wife, former magazine journalist Cathy Wilson, 45, must now find some other means to finance the estate.

Yet the news will be positively welcomed by some relatives, not to mention his first wife, Lady Jacquetta Eliot, who are determined the property should remain in the family.

For Lady Jacquetta’s ten-year-old grandson Albert is the current heir and will inherit the house – unless, of course, it is sold or placed in an external trust.

When the deal was first proposed, she is said to have told friends: ‘I can’t talk about Prince Charles, but the only thing I’ll say is: third wives with no children and Eliots turning in their graves.’

This is merely the latest in a series of controvers­ies to hit Port Eliot in recent times, with two divorces and tragically, the death of Albert’s party-loving father, Jago, who was found dead in the bath after an epileptic seizure in 2006.

It is six months since the earl announced he was in negotiatio­ns with the Prince over the sale of the 123-room house. He had hoped that the foundation would convert the property into an arts centre to rival Dumfries House, a Palladian mansion in Scotland, bought by Charles for £45 million.

The Duchy of Cornwall, which the Prince heads, has recently spent £4.7 million on 800 acres of land, farmhouses and outbuildin­gs on Port Eliot property. The Eliot family has lived there since the 16th Century. The house was remodelled in the 18th Century by Sir John Soane and now has 11 staircases, 15 back doors and 82 chimneys.

When Lord St Germans proposed an investment from the Prince, he said the partnershi­p ‘would ensure the preservati­on of centuries of history and the future of Port Eliot’s collection of fine art and antiquitie­s’.

He argued it would help provide ‘education, training and commercial opportunit­ies to an underfunde­d part of Cornwall’.

At the time, his wife said: ‘It will mean that the estate maintains its income and is relieved of the huge burden of running the house. Considerin­g the alternativ­es, i.e. the National Trust, a fleeing oligarch or the house and contents being broken up, this [would be] a sensationa­l deal and a terrific turn-up for the estate.’

Last night a spokesman for the Earl said: ‘Lord St Germans and the Port Eliot trustees are grateful to The Prince’s Foundation for Building Community for carrying out a detailed feasibilit­y study into the possibilit­y of purchasing Port Eliot House. The study has been completed and has determined that the purchase was not suitable for the Foundation.

‘Port Eliot is completely satisfied with the work and discussion­s that have taken place and the efforts that have gone into exploring this project. Lord and Lady St Germans will continue to live at Port Eliot.’

 ??  ?? THEY’RE HAVING A LAUGH: The Queen and Prince Philip clearly enjoyed watching the children’s sack race; the RAF tug o’ war team, inset
THE GREATEST REIGN: Find out how to order a glorious 100-page souvenir book version on page 74 of your FREE magazine
THEY’RE HAVING A LAUGH: The Queen and Prince Philip clearly enjoyed watching the children’s sack race; the RAF tug o’ war team, inset THE GREATEST REIGN: Find out how to order a glorious 100-page souvenir book version on page 74 of your FREE magazine
 ??  ?? JOY: Prince Charles and Autumn Phillips
JOY: Prince Charles and Autumn Phillips
 ??  ?? DISMAY: Lord and Lady St Germans, right, had hoped Prince Charles would buy Port Eliot House
DISMAY: Lord and Lady St Germans, right, had hoped Prince Charles would buy Port Eliot House

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