Desmond Guinness

Historian

Birthday September 8, 1931

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace London, England

DEATH DATE 2020-8-20, Leixlip, County Kildare, Ireland (88 years old)

Nationality Ireland

#52076 Most Popular

1744

The IGS also held Georgian Cricket matches played to the rules of 1744.

1931

Desmond Walter Guinness (8 September 1931 – 20 August 2020) was an Anglo-Irish author of Georgian art and architecture, a conservationist and the co-founder of the Irish Georgian Society.

He was the second son of the author and brewer Bryan Guinness, 2nd Baron Moyne, and his then wife Diana Mitford (later Lady Mosley).

Born on 8 September 1931, Guinness was the second son of the author Bryan Guinness and Diana Mitford; his elder brother was Jonathan.

1935

Due to Mitford's interest in fascism, her father-in-law the 1st Baron had arranged for surveillance from 1935 onward, including by one of Guinness's governesses, and MI5 even noted a plan for her to visit Hitler with her sons.

1936

Desmond's mother divorced the then Bryan Guinness after five years and married the head of the British fascist Blackshirt movement, Oswald Mosley, in Berlin in 1936.

1940

Mitford was interned in 1940, and Guinness later recalled visiting her in Holloway Prison when he was 10.

He was educated at Eton and Gordonstoun, and studied French and Italian at Christ Church, Oxford.

After completing National Service, he moved to the estate of Lord Moyne, his father, near the Phoenix Park in Dublin, as Lord Moyne lived for six months a year in Ireland, and his mother had also moved to Ireland with Mosley, first living in Clonfert, then in Fermoy.

1944

Bryan succeeded as the 2nd Baron Moyne in November 1944.

1954

Guinness was married at Oxford in 1954 to Princess Henriette Marie-Gabrielle von Urach, daughter of Fürst Albrecht von Urach and a granddaughter of King Mindaugas II of Lithuania, who was generally known as "Mariga".

1958

In 1958, he bought Leixlip Castle, Leixlip, County Kildare, Ireland, where he lived with both his first wife, Princess Henriette Marie-Gabrielle von Urach, generally known as Mariga, and later his second wife, the former Penelope Cuthbertson, whom he married in 1984.

Guinness bought Leixlip Castle and its residual 180-acre farm for £15,500, one third of his assets, in 1958, and he and his wife settled there.

Desmond and Mariga founded the Irish Georgian Society in April 1958 to help to preserve Irish architecture of all periods.

1963

This was timely as the Irish planning laws were enacted only from 1963.

The IGS became involved in numerous projects and started publishing quarterly bulletins.

Some early preservations or campaigns were at: Damer House (County Tipperary), The Conolly Folly (County Kildare), Mountjoy Square, Tailors' Hall and Hume Street (Dublin) and the Dromana Gateway in County Waterford.

1967

Between 1967 and 1979 the Guinnesses bought and started to preserve Castletown House, in Celbridge, Kildare, said to be the finest Palladian house in Ireland.

He was a member of Irish groups such as the Iveagh Trust, the CKAS, the RIAC and the Kildare Street & University Club.

1969

Mariga Guinness moved to London alone in 1969, later lived in County Antrim, and later still returned to Leixlip Castle.

1980

The Guinnesses divorced in 1980, and Mariga died some years later.

In 1980 he was made an honorary Doctor of Laws at Trinity College Dublin.

1984

In 1984, Guinness married Penelope Cuthbertson, daughter of the socialite Teresa Jungman, and a granddaughter of the artist Nico Wilhelm Jungmann.

In more recent years, Guinness founded a scholarship for students of architecture.

He was Master of the North Kildare Harriers.

1990

He stood down as President of the IGS in 1990.

2001

In 2001 he was made an honorary member of the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland and was awarded the gold medal of the Eire Society of Boston.

He was a member of the Society of Dilettanti in London.

2006

In 2006 he was presented with a Europa Nostra award by the Queen of Spain.

2010

In 2010 he headed the Saint Patrick's Day parade in Seattle.

2014

In June 2014 he was awarded honorary lifetime membership of the Royal Dublin Society.

2020

Guinness died on 20 August 2020, at the age of 88.

The Guinnesses had a son, Patrick Desmond Carl-Alexander, and a daughter, Marina.

Through Patrick he was a grandfather of the fashion model Jasmine Guinness.

His daughter Marina is a patron of the arts and of Irish musicians including Glen Hansard, Damien Rice, and the band Kíla.

Marina has three children of her own: Patrick (by Stewart Copeland of The Police), Violet (by photographer Perry Ogden), and Finbar (by record producer Denny Cordell).

There are no children from his second marriage.

His brother is Jonathan Guinness, 3rd Baron Moyne.

He was the older half-brother (on his mother's side) of Max Mosley, former President of the FIA.

His conservation work has been recognised by many American and English cultural groups, and Europa Nostra.