Royal residence{{anchor|Claremont Estate Purchase (Grant of Life Interest) Act 1816}}
In 1816, Claremont was bought by the British Nation through an Act of Parliament as a wedding present for the
Prince Regent's daughter Princess
Charlotte and her husband Prince
Leopold of Saxe-Coburg. At that time, the estate was valued to Parliament at £60,000: "Mr Huskisson stated that it had been agreed to purchase the house and
demesnes of Clermont... The valuation of the farms, farm-houses, and park, including 350 acres of land, was 36,000/; the mansion, 19,000/; and the furniture, 6,000/; making together 60,000/. The mansion, which is in good repair, could not be built now for less than 91,000/." To the nation's great sorrow, however, Princess Charlotte, who was second in line to the throne, was, after two miscarriages, to die there after giving birth to a stillborn son in November the following year. This sorrow is expressed in
Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poem "Lines on the Mausoleum of the Princess Charlotte, at Claremont", published in
Forget Me Not in 1824. Although Leopold retained ownership of Claremont until his death in 1865, he left the house in 1831 when he became the first
King of the Belgians.
Queen Victoria was a frequent visitor to Claremont—both as a child and later as an adult—when Leopold, her doting uncle, lent her the house. She, in turn, lent the house to the exiled French King and Queen,
Louis-Philippe I and
Maria Amalia (the parents-in-law of Leopold I of Belgium), after the
Revolutions of 1848. The exiled King died at Claremont in 1850. In 1857,
Offenbach and his
Bouffes company performed three of his
opéras bouffes there for Marie Amelie and her sons during an eight-week tour of England. In 1870, Queen Victoria commissioned
Francis John Williamson to sculpt a marble memorial to Charlotte and Leopold which was erected inside the house. (The memorial was subsequently moved to
St George's Church, Esher.) Victoria bought Claremont for her fourth, and youngest, son
Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, when he married
Princess Helena of Waldeck and Pyrmont in 1882. The Duke and Duchess of Albany had two children—
Alice and
Charles. Charles, who had been born at Claremont in 1884, inherited the title and position of
Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha upon the death of his uncle,
Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, in 1900. He moved to the duchy in Germany to take the throne, becoming a German citizen, and renouncing his claim in the British succession. Claremont should have passed to Charles upon his mother's death in 1922, but because he served as a German general in the
First World War, the British government disallowed the inheritance. Claremont was accordingly confiscated and sold by the Public Trustee to shipping magnate Sir William Corry, director of the
Cunard Line. Two years after Sir William's death, in 1926, it was bought by Eugen Spier, a wealthy German financier. In 1930, Claremont stood empty and was marked for demolition when it was bought, together with the Belvedere, the stables, and of parkland, by the Governors of a south London school, later renamed Claremont School and, since 1978, has been known as Claremont Fan Court School. ==The National Trust==