Person    | Female  Born 21/4/1814  Died 30/12/1906

Baroness Angela Georgina Burdett-Coutts

Categories: Philanthropy

One of the great Victorian philanthropists who sought to rid London of its slums. Also one of the richest women in Britain in the mid 19th Century, widely respected for her undying generosity and piety, she was known as the 'Queen of the Poor' and 'Nursing-Mother of the Church of England'. She funded Livingstone's expeditions to Africa, helped set up the NSPCC, closely involved with the RSPCA for many years, was the first woman to be a member of the Royal Society,  the first to receive the Freedom of the City of London, the first to be given a peerage on her own merit, in 1871. Died at Stratton House and was buried in Westminster Abbey in honour of her charitable services.

Her parents were Sophia Coutts ((1775–1844, the youngest of 3 daughters) and Sir Francis Burdett, Baronet (1770- 844, MP), but her great wealth came from her maternal grandfather, Thomas Coutts, the banker, via his second wife Harriot Mellon (1777-1837). Harriot, a young actress, met Coutts when he was 70 (can you see where this is going?). He was married but set Harriot up financially and in society. On his wife's death in 1815, just 4 days after the funeral, he married Harriot, to the dismay of his daughters, and on his death Harriot inherited his entire fortune, having promised to ensure his family were looked after. 5 years a widow, at age 47 she married again, to the 26-year old William Aubrey de Vere Beauclerk, ninth Duke of St Albans (1801-1849). She greatly increased the Coutts fortune and, having no offspring herself, she chose Angela, one of Coutts' descendants by his first wife to inherit the bulk of the wealth. In 'The Story of Holly Lodge', 2009, Margaret Downing explains that Angela was "the only member of the family with whom she {Harriot} had enjoyed a close friendship..." As stipulated in Harriot's will, Angela added her grandfather's name to her own and, at 23, became the owner of Coutts bank.

She had had a conventional upbringing with a governess, Hannah Brown, who became her companion and friend and partner for over 50 years. Together they repelled many suitors/gold-diggers but her proposal to the Duke of Wellington (aged 77) when she was 32 suggests they had strange criteria in their search for her matrimonial partner. It was only when she was 67, after Hannah's death, that loneliness caused her to marry the 30-year old American, William Lehman Ashmead Bartlett in 1881 (who, incidentally, was an Old Cholmeleian, an old boy of Highgate School). The marriage caused a scandal but it lasted 25 years, until her death and seems to have been a happy one. He took her name, became an MP and a horse-breeder. She entertained lavishly at both her town house, 1 Stratton Street, and at her Highgate home, Holly Lodge.

In 2006 the British Library obtained letters between Angela and her sister, appropriately named Clara Money, which shed new light on the circumstances surrounding her marriage. Harriot's will (remember Harriot?) stipulated that Angela should not marry a foreigner. Clara considered the American Bartlett to be so inappropriate as a brother-in-law that she invoked this clause and successfully claimed three fifths of Angela's income. She and her son, Francis, took the surname Money-Coutts.

Susan S. Lewis’s 2012 dissertation provides some interesting information. As well as the London fountains Coutts also erected a fountain in Manchester and the memorial fountain to Greyfriars Bobby in Edinburgh.

2024: Graham Dalgleish wrote to suggest another event that may have prompted her marriage. Her only brother, Robert the extremely wealthy 6th Burdett baronet, died unmarried in 1880.  It’s possible that she inherited sufficient from him that she was willing to risk losing Harriot’s fortune by marrying a foreigner the following year.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Baroness Angela Georgina Burdett-Coutts

Commemorated ati

Burdett-Coutts - Victoria Park - fountain

This extravaganza in Victorian gothic with Moorish touches was designed by Da...

Read More

Burdett-Coutts - Victoria Park - plaque

The Burdett-Coutts Memorial Drinking Fountain Presented in 1862 Bow Heritage ...

Read More

Chauncy Hare Townshend Schools

The Chauncy Hare Townshend Schools The Baroness Burdett-Coutts, the Revd. Tho...

Read More

Show all 8

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Baroness Angela Georgina Burdett-Coutts

Creations i

Burdett-Coutts Memorial Sundial

This elaborate piece of high Victoriana was designed by George Highton of Bri...

Read More

Burdett-Coutts - Victoria Park - fountain

This extravaganza in Victorian gothic with Moorish touches was designed by Da...

Read More

Caxton Hall - foundation stone

The Town Hall Westminster This foundation stone was laid March 29th 1882 by t...

Read More

St Stephen's extension

St Stephens was erected in 1847-9, designed by Benjamin Ferrey, and funded by...

Read More

Other Subjects

Lawrence Sheriff

Lawrence Sheriff

Probably born in or near Rugby, 1515-16. In 1534 he went to London as an apprentice to a grocer. 7 years later he was a grocer and in 1554 he was elected to the Worshipful Company of Grocers. He wa...

Person, Education, Philanthropy

1 memorial
Sir Julius Wernher

Sir Julius Wernher

Co-founder and funder (with Alfred Beit) of the Royal School of Mines building. Born Damstadt, Germany, came to London in 1871, and, acting as a diamond agent, went to Kimberly in South Africa. Re...

Person, Industry, Philanthropy, Race Issues, Germany, South Africa

1 memorial
William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme

William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme

Soap magnate and philanthropist, founder of Port Sunlight, near Liverpool. Born 6 Wood Street, Bolton, Lancashire. Known for his patronage of the arts and paternalistic social policies, he was also...

Person, Industry, Philanthropy, Race Issues

1 memorial
Sir Henry Tate

Sir Henry Tate

Merchant and philanthropist. Born at White Coppice, near Chorley, Lancashire. By the time he was thirty-five he had established a successful chain of grocery stores. In 1872 he purchased the patent...

Person, Commerce, Philanthropy

1 memorial
Reverend Canon John Erskine Clarke

Reverend Canon John Erskine Clarke

Clergyman. He issued the first parish magazine and established several other religious publications. Responsible for founding churches, schools and hospitals in Battersea. Born in India to an offi...

Person, Education, Journalism / Publishing, Philanthropy, Religion, India, Scotland

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Bowler plaque - Match Girls

Bowler plaque - Match Girls

E1, Hanbury Street, 22, Hanbury Community Centre

The plaque punningly represents "match girls" - very nice. Hanbury Hall is where they met to organise their strikes for better working co...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Heritage Foundation

Heritage Foundation

We believe this group now encompasses Comic Heritage, Musical Heritage, Sports Heritage and Films and Television Heritage. Its aim is to pay tribute to Britain's entertainers and raise funds for go...

Group, Cinema, History, Humour, Music / songs, Sport / Games, Theatre, TV & Radio

64 memorials
Besley drinking fountain

Besley drinking fountain

A drinking fountain was erected in Aldersgate Street in 1878 in memory of Robert Besley. It was removed 1934.

Building, Food & Drink

1 memorial
Valerie Carter

Valerie Carter

Moved to Forty Hill in 1959. President of the Enfield Preservation Society, 1997 - her death. With a background in journalism and publishing she wrote/edited/assisted with a number of Enfield publi...

Person, Community / Clubs, History

2 memorials
World War 1

World War 1

We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came along at which point it was renamed as World War One or the First World War. But the term was first used in print in 1920...

Event, Armed Forces, Tragedy

403 memorials