Lady
Katherine Agnes Blanche Carnegie was born 12 June 1867, the daughter
of James, 9th Earl of Southesk. Katherine was the youngest daughter
in a family of eleven children. She was artistic, creative and possessed
a vivid imagination, inspired perhaps by the tales of her elder brother
David, an explorer who travelled through nearly 3,000 miles of previously
unexplored country in Australia, only to meet his end in Nigeria in
1900 when he was shot by a poisoned arrow!
On 5 August 1890, Katherine married Courtenay Morgan. The marriage produced
two children: Evan Frederic in 1893 and Gwyneth Erica in 1895. Evan
went on to succeed his father as Viscount Tredegar but Gwyneth died
tragically in 1924 aged 29.
Katherine never lived at Tredegar House, she did not particularly like
South Wales (this may not be unconnected with the way she felt about
her husband) she preferred living at her own home, Honeywood House in
Dorking, Surrey. There she would indulge in her curious hobby of making
birds nests. A footman would be sent to collect mud, twigs and bits
of straw, these would be presented to Katherine on a silver salver,
and with incredible dexterity she would create a highly accurate copy
of a birds nest. (kingfisher nests were her favourite). This nest, more
often than not, would then be placed in a nearby tree or bush, in the
hope that a feathered friend would fly in and make a home there. Katherine
always claimed that her hobby was "far better than fishing!"
As she got older, Katherine became more and more eccentric, and it appears
that she became quite convinced that she was a bird. Society was awash
with tales of Lady Tredegar building giant nests and sitting in them!
Her son, Evan, (who looked strikingly avian and was always surrounded
by birds) would often invite a friend to come to dinner at Honeywood
House saying happily "You must come and meet my mother, she makes
the most wonderful birds nests. We are quite a bird family!"
For all the amusement her hobby gave other people, Katherine herself
was a very lonely figure. She suffered from acute insomnia and became
an invalid. She did not attend her daughters funeral or her son's wedding
and was very rarely seen in public. She had a hatred of noise and would
sometimes sit in complete darkness, or even in a closet, to shut out
the outside world. She did, however, maintain her passion for art and
patronised such figures as Augustus John, Ambrose McEvoy and Gaudier-Brzeska.
The portrait of Katherine you can see in the Portrait Gallery hangs
at Tredegar House and is painted by Augustus John, who became a good
friend of both Katherine and her son.
Katherine, Viscountess Tredegar died in 1949. In her will she left a
work of art to Augustus John, and explicitly stated that her ashes were
NOT to be taken to Wales!