Following the death of
Robert Walpole, 2nd Earl of Orford, in 1751, "a lesser part of the collection" was sold at auction by
George Walpole, 3rd Earl of Orford. Many of the Old Master paintings subsequently went to the
Hermitage Museum having been sold by the 3rd Earl to
Catherine the Great in 1779 for £40,550 (). Many of these remain in the Hermitage, but some subsequently passed to other Russian museums. Some items from the collection were sold in 1853, including a portrait of Joseph Carreras by Sir
Godfrey Kneller which returned to Houghton Hall. Further sales took place in the 1930s. During the 2nd World War, the collection was stored for protection in
Sverdlovsk. The collection returned to the Hermitage in 1946 and it still owns 127 works from the collection. Some works remained at Houghton after the sale to Catherine including
Thomas Gainsborough's oil painting of his own family --
Thomas Gainsborough, with His Wife and Elder Daughter, Mary (circa 1751–1752). From September 2002 to February 2003 34 pictures from the collection were displayed at the
Hermitage Rooms of
Somerset House, on loan from the
Hermitage Museum. From 17 May 2013, until 24 November 2013, 70 pictures from the Hermitage and other museums that were part of the collection were loaned to Houghton Hall to be exhibited in their original settings. ==Some pictures from the collection==