Nat
Rothschild’s career path – from playboy
to plutocrat – has to be seen against
the backdrop of his family history,
studded as it is with eccentrics who
were torn between loyalty to an immense
and powerful name and the urge to break
away from the clan.
His grandfather, Victor Rothschild, who
died in 1990 at 79, set the pattern for
much of the family in both business and
lifestyle. While still at Cambridge
University, he was a playboy who drove
fast cars, water-skiied off Monte Carlo
and played first-class cricket for
Northamptonshire.
He also joined the Apostles, the
university’s secret society that
included the traitors Kim Philby, Guy
Burgess and Anthony Blunt. It was Victor
who lent Blunt – later surveyor of the
Queen’s paintings – the money to buy his
first Poussin. When Blunt’s treachery
was eventually exposed, Rothschild
denied that he was the “Fifth Man” in
the spy ring, famously stating: “I am
not and never have been a Soviet agent.”
This was never seriously in doubt: his
work for MI5 during the war had won him
a George Medal.
Just 26 when he became the 3rd Baron
Rothschild, he always sat on the Labour
benches. Yet the Conservative prime
minister Edward Heath put him in charge
of his think tank, the Central Policy
Review Staff, and Margaret Thatcher made
him a security adviser.
As a scientist, Lord Rothschild chaired
the Agricultural Research Council, then
worked in Cambridge’s zoology department
as well as holding a research job at
Shell. He ultimately chaired the
family’s UK bank, NM Rothschild & Sons,
but did not involve himself in detail.
His sister Miriam, a distinguished
entomologist, was nicknamed “Queen of
the Fleas” after cataloguing their
father’s insect collection. Their
younger sister Kathleen, meanwhile, was
known as an avid jazz fan: Thelonius
Monk named a composition after her and
Charlie “Bird” Parker died in her New
York flat.
When Victor Rothschild retired in 1976,
Sir Evelyn de Rothschild – then 45 –took
over as bank chairman, even though he
came from another branch of the family,
the de Rothschilds.
Sir Evelyn, who had joined the bank in
his mid-twenties, had developed a sound
business sense that he also employed on
the boards of the Express and Telegraph
newspaper groups, as well as at The
Economist, whose board he chaired until
1989. His third wife, the American
lawyer Lynn Forester, was a supporter of
Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign
but last month switched her allegiance
to John McCain. She and Sir Evelyn live
in Ascott House, one of the many
Rothschild homes in Buckinghamshire.
Katherine, the daughter of one of Sir
Evelyn’s Rothschild cousins, is married
to Marcus Agius, chairman of Barclays.
Victor’s eldest son, Jacob Rothschild,
also worked at NM Rothschild – but he
left the family bank in 1980 after a
dispute with Sir Evelyn over strategy.
Jacob, who had worked at Morgan Stanley
in New York, wanted to merge with the
rival SG Warburg bank; his conservative
cousin did not.
As a leaving present, Jacob was given
the Rothschild Investment Trust; he
subsequently set up his own companies in
the West End and built a new financial
empire that was considered more
aggressive than the traditional family
bank.
Jacob, now 72, who inherited his
father’s title in 1990, is as interested
in the arts as he is in finance: he has
chaired the National Gallery for many
years and was chairman of the lottery’s
heritage fund from 1994-8. In 2003, he
became deputy chairman of BSkyB, the
broadcaster in which News Corporation,
the parent company of The Sunday Times,
has a 39.1% stake. Known as a
philanthropist and superb networker,
Jacob has also taken a great interest in
the preservation of fine buildings – he
restored Spencer House in St James’s,
the former London home of the family of
his friend Diana, Princess of Wales, and
was instrumental in the refurbishment of
Somerset House in central London.
Like most Rothschilds, he shuns the
limelight – except on his own terms. He
was appointed a member of the Order of
Merit in 2002.
His much younger half-brother, Amschel
Rothschild, was groomed to head the
family bank, but the pressure proved too
much for him. He hanged himself in a
Paris hotel room in 1996, leaving a
widow, the former Anita Guinness, and
three children. Their elder daughter,
Kate, is married to Ben Goldsmith, son
of Sir James; the younger, Alice, has
been linked to Ben’s married brother Zac.
A distant cousin, Raphael de Rothschild,
also died tragically four years after
Amschel – in his case of a heroin
overdose in New York.
The current head of the Rothschild
banking empire is David de Rothschild,
who was born in New York, to which his
parents had fled from France when the
Nazis seized their family home. Though
the family returned to France, his
father, Guy de Rothschild, was to flee
again to America in high dudgeon when
Banque Rothschild was nationalised by
François Mitterrand in 1981.
David later obtained a banking licence
for himself and eventually won the right
to use the Rothschild name again. He now
lives near the Normandy town of Pont-L’Eveque,
where he served as mayor for 18 years.
His properties include the Chateau
Lafite-Rothschild vineyards.
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