
In recent history by far the most flamboyant of the family was the 6th Earl, known simply as Castlerosse who was the first member of the British aristocracy to write a gossip column for a newspaper. The column was entitled Londoners Log in The Sunday Express owned by his friend Lord Beaverbrook. He was notorious as a playboy - eating, drinking, gambling and womanising to excess. He built the Killarney Golf and Fishing Club in 1938 after their marriage. Castlerosse, the 6th Earl of Kenmare died suddenly during the night in September 1943 following which was his greatest contribution to Killarney. He was married twice but had no children. His second wife Enid Maud Lindeman of Sydney, already widowed three times, was to lose another husband 9 months their marriage. Castlerosse, the 6th Earl of Kenmare dies suddenly during the night in September 1943 following a whopping dinner.
Beatrice Grosvenor, niece of the 6th & 7th Earls and herself the granddaughter of the First Duke of Westminster inherited the nearly bankrupt estate in 1952, but not the title. She sold the manor house and much of the lands to pay death duties. Beatrice retained the lakeside property now occupied by the Castlerosse Hotel and her second Killarney home, Kenmare House.
The Castlerosse Hotel however was not the first hotel built on this site. The Royal Victoria Hotel, one of Ireland's first "grand" hotels occupied this exact location during the 19th and early 20th century and played host to Princes, Dukes and Earls and, according to popular legend, enjoyed a brief visit by Queen Victoria on her visit to Killarney in 1861.
Today the Castlerosse Hotel occupies the same majestic setting enjoyed by generations of Viscounts and Earls on what was the last portion of the great Kenmare Estate in the private ownership of the Browne Family.
A 40 page pictorial historyPrice €5