Lees-Milne was born on 6 August 1908 at
Wickhamford Manor,
Worcestershire as George James Henry Lees-Milne. His biographer
Michael Bloch observed that in
Another Self, Lees-Milne "conveys the impression that he hailed from an old county family and that Wickhamford was their native seat. This was not quite the case.... His father... had bought Wickhamford, and moved from
Lancashire to Worcestershire, only two years before Jim's birth." He was the second of three children and the elder son of a prosperous cotton manufacturer and farmer, George Crompton Lees-Milne (1880–1949), and his wife, Helen Christina (1884–1962), a daughter of Henry Bailey,
JP and
Deputy Lieutenant of
Coates, Gloucestershire. Lees-Milne's maternal grandfather was
Sir Joseph Bailey, 1st Baronet. His uncle,
Joseph Bailey, second baronet, was later created
Baron Glanusk. George Lees-Milne, once a lieutenant in the
Cheshire Yeomanry, chaired the family business, A. and A. Crompton & Co. Ltd, deriving a fortune mainly from a Lancashire cotton mill. Lees-Milne's parents were a "curiously contrasting couple" – his father "shy but steady" and "conventional in outlook" with a "predilection for gambling and philandering", "obsessively punctual and constantly making plans". His mother was "uninhibited with a streak of mental instability... which ran in the Bailey family and which [Lees-Milne] always feared might lurk in himself." She was "unconventional", "whimsical and impulsive", and where "she had a sense of humour, he [her husband] had none." An exaggerated portrait of his parents as "a pair of ludicrous eccentrics" appears in
Another Life. Lees-Milne's sister, Audrey, born in 1905, married Matthew Arthur, 3rd
Baron Glenarthur. His brother Richard was born in 1910. The Lees-Milne family belonged to a junior branch of the Lees family that later came to own
Thurland Castle, Lancashire, having been
tenant farmers on an estate called Clarksfield near
Oldham, which they later purchased from the
Booth family of
Dunham Massey in the reign of
James I. Succeeding generations became successful as "master cotton spinners and manufacturers". Its members were "a rough lot" (Lees-Milne suggested their motto should have been "Sport and Booze"). Though the discovery of coal on their land increased their wealth, it "did not civilise them" – Lees-Milne's great-grandfather, Joseph Lees (1819-1890), was "one of three barely literate brothers... known, after their respective
obsessions, as
Nimrod,
Ramrod and
Fishing Rod". Joseph was "Fishing Rod". James Arthur Lees, the son of "Ramrod", owner of Alkrington Hall, Middleton, was the author of
Three in Norway (by two of them). They had ties of marriage to two families he claimed to be "slightly grander": the Cromptons of Crompton Hall and the Milnes of Park House. The name Milne was added by royal licence in 1890 by Lees-Milne's grandfather James (the first of the family to attend
Eton) to comply with terms for inheriting the estate of a maternal relative. A pillar of the
Conservative Party in Oldham, supporting
Winston Churchill's candidacy, this James Lees-Milne was said to have refused a
baronetcy (which would have come to his grandson James) on the grounds that he might have to make public speeches. The estate acquired included
Crompton Hall, Lancashire, which alongside Wickhamford Manor was owned by George Crompton Lees-Milne. (He eventually sold both, but the former stayed in the family). Lees-Milne attended
Lockers Park School in
Hertfordshire,
Eton, and
Magdalen College, Oxford, from which he graduated with a third-class degree in history in 1931. ==Career==