used in the film
Out of Africa In 1910, after a trip to South Africa, Finch Hatton travelled to
British East Africa and bought some land on the western side of the
Great Rift Valley near what is now
Eldoret. He turned over the investment to a partner and spent his time hunting. In
Kenya, Finch Hatton was a close friend of the Hon.
Reginald Berkeley Cole (1882–1925), an
Anglo–Irish aristocrat, born into a prominent
Ulster family, who had also settled in the colony. Cole was very well connected in Kenya, being the brother-in-law of
Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere, the effective leader of the
White settlers in the country. In June 1910, Denys's older brother
Guy Montagu (then Viscount Maidstone) snatched up and married the wealthiest American heiress of the season,
Margaretta Armstrong Drexel, daughter of banking magnate
Anthony Joseph Drexel Jr. They were married at 22 Grosvenor Square attended by 1500 guests, Denys attended the wedding but declined to be his best man. A year later in 1911, he went back to England to attend King George V and Queen Mary's coronation with his family. He served with his friend Berkeley Cole, a former officer in the
9th Lancers and a temporary captain in command of an eponymous irregular force known as Cole's Scouts. The irregular unit was made up of
Somali soldiers and British soldiers from the 2nd Battalion
Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire). After this unit was disbanded, Finch Hatton was given a staff appointment as
aide-de-camp to
General Hoskins. On 1 February 1917, he was awarded the
Military Cross. In
Channel 4's
Edward VIII: The Lion King, it was revealed that in 1928 and 1930, Finch Hatton played host to the Prince of Wales, later
Edward VIII, in a
safari that switched from hunting to photography. This relationship led to Edward VIII's taking up Finch Hatton's causes, such as abandoning the use of cars for hunting safaris, and shifting towards filming big game, wildlife photography, and the founding of the
Serengeti National Park.
Relationship with Blixen Finch Hatton was not known to have had any serious romances before he met Baroness Blixen. They were introduced at the
Muthaiga Club on 5 April 1918. Soon afterwards he was assigned to military service in
Egypt. On his return to
Kenya after the
Armistice, he developed a close friendship with Blixen and her
Swedish husband,
Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke. He left Africa again in 1920 but returned in 1922, investing in a land development company. By this time, Karen Blixen had separated from her husband, and after their divorce in 1925, Finch Hatton moved into her house and began leading
safaris for wealthy sportsmen. Among his clients were Marshall Field Jr and
Edward, Prince of Wales. According to a highly sympathetic biography of
Beryl Markham by author
Mary S. Lovell, in 1930 Finch Hatton succumbed to a love affair with Markham, who was working as a race-horse trainer in Nairobi and the surrounding area. Markham had had a series of lovers, both single and married, and she had apparently had an attraction to Finch Hatton for years, but had not acted on it while Blixen, who gave Markham shelter and support over the years, was most deeply involved with Finch Hatton. During this period, however, he was also still seeing Blixen. Later, Markham became known as a pioneer flyer herself; Markham attributed her interest in flying to her association with
Tom Campbell Black.
Death On the morning of 14 May 1931, Finch Hatton's
Gipsy Moth took off from
Voi Airport, circled the airport twice, then plunged to the ground and burst into flames. Finch Hatton and his
Kĩkũyũ servant Kamau were killed. His final flight is recounted by fellow pilot Beryl Markham in her memoir
West with the Night. In accordance with his wishes, Finch Hatton was buried in the
Ngong Hills, some five miles (8 km) to the west of the present-day
Nairobi National Park. Karen Blixen had chosen the site. "There was a place in the hills, on the first ridge in the Game Reserve that I myself, at the time I thought that I was to live and die in Africa, had pointed out to Denys as my future burial-place. In the evening while we looked at the hills from my home, he remarked that then he would like to be buried there himself as well. Since then, sometimes when we drove out in the hills, Denys had said; 'Let us drive as far as our graves'." Later, his brother the
14th Earl of Winchilsea erected an
obelisk at the gravesite upon which he placed a simple brass plaque inscribed with Finch Hatton's name, the dates of his birth and death and an extract from
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's narrative poem
the Rime of the Ancient Mariner: "He prayeth well, who loveth well both man and bird and beast". The co-ordinates of the gravesite are: and the Google maps Denys Finch Hatton Grave. A footbridge at Eton is inscribed with the words "Famous in these fields and by his many friends greatly beloved. Denys Finch Hatton 1900–1906". The dates refer to his attendance at Eton. ==Fictional portrayals==