Upon his father's death at
Usselby Hall in July 1835, Tennyson inherited the family estates and changed his family's name to Tennyson-d'Eyncourt. A ruined castle was part of the property, and Charles wished to establish a noble lineage for himself with a title and a castle. Beacons was renamed
Bayons, to make it sound like a
Norman castle, and it was extensively enlarged and rebuilt in the style of a Gothic castellated manor-house.
Public life For many years, he was
MP for
Lambeth, and was made a
Privy Counsellor in 1832. Also in the 1830s, along with
Augustus, Duke of Sussex, and Admiral Sir
Sidney Smith, he was one of the prime movers in a plan to have the Order of
Knights Templar revived as a British
order of chivalry. In this he failed, and he also failed during 1839–1841 in an attempt to revive the d'Eyncourt peerage for himself and his heirs. In February 1829 he was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society. He published, in 1850 a book of poems,
Eustace, in memory of his youngest and favourite son who had died abroad; it had the misfortune to appear at the same time as Tennyson's
In Memoriam, and suffered greatly by the comparison. Charles thoroughly disapproved of the poetry of his nephew Alfred (
Horrid rubbish indeed . . . a discredit to British taste), and the latter's appointment as
Poet Laureate in the same year and subsequent offer of a
baronetcy caused him outrage and chagrin. He did not live long enough to have to endure a 'Somersby Tennyson' being elevated to the peerage. ==Personal life==