, before 1871. Rare and pioneering
concrete dwelling built for the
magnificent 4th Earl of Carnarvon. Originally tripartite, they show both agricultural and urban
Neo-Palladian traits. stayed there near the end of his life. Carnarvon became a
Freemason in 1856, joining the Westminster and Keystone Lodge, No. 10. In 1860 he was made the second Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of
Mark Master Masons (created in 1856) and in 1870 he was appointed Deputy Grand Master of the
United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) by
Lord Ripon, and was
Pro Grand Master from 1874 to 1890. Furthermore, he was elected Fellow of the
Royal Society in 1875, confirming, in addition to his work as a statesman, his interest in innovation, geometry, the
Enlightenment, science, the
Scientific Revolution and the world. • 1855–1878: The
Highclere mausoleum or chapel was built for Henrietta Anna, Countess of Carnarvon, in memory of his father and her husband,
Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon. Between 1839 and 1842, his father the third earl had employed Sir
Charles Barry to turn the Georgian
Highclere house into a
Jacobethan castle. The interiors and west wing were carried out by Sir Charles Barry's assistant
Thomas Allom who also provided the design of the funerary chapel-mausoleum. The entrance hallway-vestibule inside was designed by
Sir Gilbert Scott. The work on the house was complete by 1878. • 1869–1870:
Church of St Michael and All Angels, Highclere, by Sir Gilbert Scott. • 1870:
Concrete Cottages, Long Piddle, Burghclere Bottom, Scouses Corner, Kingsclere or Sydmonton road,
Old Burghclere. Rare and early
concrete or
mass concrete estate housing. The apparatus employed in the construction could have been that patented and manufactured by Messrs. Drake, Brothers, & Reid, of London, in 1868. Designed possibly by Thomas Robjohn Wonnacott or
Charles Barry, Jr. (Around the same time, neighbouring landowner
Lord Ashburton and his clerk of works Thomas Potter, who wrote
Concrete: its use in building and the construction of concrete walls, floors, etc., 1877, built at least one pair of concrete cottages in the Wiltshire villages of
All Cannings and
Steeple Langford.) Carnarvon had long been thinking about labourers' cottages and accompanying allotments. The
Reading Mercury reported the Burghclere project on Saturday, 30 October 1869: • 1874–1881:
Villa Altachiara ("Highclere" in Italian) (Villa Carnarvon) near
Portofino, Liguria. A massive villa overlooking Portofino. It was still owned by the Herberts when
Evelyn Waugh visited in 1936.
Estates and landholdings Lord Carnarvon owned , which yielded an annual income of £37,211 during the early 1880s; his landholdings included in Somerset, in Nottinghamshire, and in Hampshire. ==Marriages and issue==