The title was reputedly granted for the admiral's role in the defeat of the
Spanish Armada in 1588. He subsequently went on to obtain the title of
Earl of Suffolk from Elizabeth I's successor, King
James I, which latter title continues in his male-line descendants. However, the barony of Howard de Walden eventually passed out of the Howard family with the death in 1688 of
James Howard, 3rd Earl of Suffolk, and it came briefly to the 4th
Earl of Bristol before passing in 1803 to his great-grandson, the four-year-old Charles Ellis. The title fell into
abeyance between 1688 and 1784, between the heirs of the 3rd Earl's two daughters — Lady Essex Howard (a daughter by his first marriage) and Lady Elizabeth Howard (a daughter by his second marriage). Lady Essex Howard married Edward Griffin, 1st Baron Griffin, and had descendants. Her granddaughter, the Hon. Ann Griffin, was the daughter of the 2nd Baron Griffin, and her son John Griffin Whitwell, later Field Marshal John Griffin Griffin (he changed his surname in 1749), inherited one-half or a moiety of the barony when his maternal uncle the 3rd Baron Griffin died without legitimate issue. In 1784, the barony was called out of abeyance in his favour. In 1788, the new 4th Baron Howard de Walden was also created 1st
Baron Braybrooke with special remainder to a kinsman,
Richard Aldworth Neville. At the death of Lord Howard de Walden and Braybrooke in 1797 without any issue, the barony of Howard de Walden passed to the only other heir—the representative of the 3rd Earl of Suffolk's younger daughter, Lady Elizabeth Felton. Her daughter Elizabeth Felton had married as his 2nd wife
John Hervey, 1st Earl of Bristol, and their grandson was
Frederick Hervey, 4th Earl of Bristol (1730–1803). He had inherited the earldom only upon the death of two older brothers. At his death, his second but eldest surviving son inherited the earldom as 5th Earl and eventually became the
1st Marquess of Bristol. However, the barony of Howard de Walden passed out of the Hervey family, to a great-grandson,
Charles Ellis, 6th Baron Howard de Walden, who inherited in 1803 and also became 2nd
Baron Seaford. The Ellis family owed their wealth to sugar plantations at Montpelier in the
Colony of Jamaica, although Charles lived in England and does not seem to have visited there until in his mid-forties. The family's English properties comprised a house in Audley Square, London, and an estate at Seaford in Sussex. The young Lord Howard de Walden (1799–1868), aged four when he inherited the title from his great-grandfather, eventually married Lady Lucy Cavendish-Scott-Bentinck, youngest daughter of
William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland, and sister and co-heiress of the reclusive
John Bentinck, 5th Duke of Portland. With her childless sister, Viscountess Ossington, she inherited the Duke of Portland's London estate in Marylebone in 1879. Building leases granted from the mid-18th century began to make huge financial returns from the 1870s and quickly made the Howard de Walden family one of the wealthiest in the country. Charles died in 1868 and his heir had to wait until the death of his mother in 1899 before receiving his London inheritance. Meanwhile the indebted Jamaican estates were conveyed to his younger brother Evelyn in 1891. The 7th Baron, Frederick George (1830–1899), was a soldier with the 4th Light Dragoons. Aged 46 he married Blanche Holden, a beauty 25 years younger than he, whom he subsequently divorced, to the scandal of the day. Their only child, son Thomas Evelyn Ellis, became the 8th Baron Howard de Walden on his father's death in 1899. He adopted the name of Scott-Ellis instead of Ellis and was a keen sportsman and playwright with a particular interest in promoting the Welsh performing arts. The London estate which came through his grandmother made him one of the wealthiest men in England and his main residences were
Seaford House in Belgrave Square, London, and
Chirk Castle in Wales; he was also involved in the
Second Boer War as part with the British military. He was succeeded by his son
John Scott-Ellis, 9th Baron Howard de Walden and 5th Baron Seaford (1912–1999). In 1999, while a cousin succeeded as Baron Seaford, the barony of Howard de Walden fell into
abeyance among the 9th Baron's four daughters and co-heiresses, who also jointly inherited substantial estates in London. By royal warrant dated 25 June 2004, the Queen called the barony of Howard de Walden out of abeyance in favour of the eldest daughter,
Hazel Czernin (1935–2024). In 1957, she had married Joseph
Czernin, son of Count Franz Josef Czernin. He is descended from one of the oldest and most prominent families of the
Kingdom of Bohemia (in modern-day
Czech Republic). The Czernin family's noble titles of
freiherr and
imperial count were granted by the
Holy Roman Emperors in 1607 and 1623, respectively. By her husband, she had five daughters and a son,
Peter Czernin (born 1966), who inherited the title on her death in 2024. The principal estate owned by previous barons—
Audley End House at
Saffron Walden in Essex—which had been obtained by
Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Suffolk, from his maternal grandfather
Thomas Audley, 1st Baron Audley, was separated from the title when it was left by the 4th Baron Howard de Walden and 1st
Baron Braybrooke to his relative
Richard Aldworth Neville, 2nd Baron Braybrooke. Due to their substantial Central London landholdings, known as the
Howard de Walden Estate, the Howard de Walden family is one of the wealthiest in Britain, with a net worth of about £4 billion in 2016, in which year Baroness Howard de Walden was ranked the fifth-richest woman in Britain by the
Sunday Times Rich List. ==Baron Howard de Walden (1597)==