In the 1870s Holford was reputedly the richest commoner in England. He was also one of the most distinguished art connoisseurs of his time, who assembled ‘one of the choicest collections’ of old masters in London.
Holford was born in London and brought up on his father’s estate at Westonbirt, Gloucestershire, which had been acquired by his family in 1665. He was the only child of George Peter Holford, a barrister and the fourth generation of the family to work as a master in chancery.
After graduating from Oxford in 1829, Holford briefly studied law, but showed a greater talent for landscape gardening. That year he began to plant an arboretum at the family estate which was gradually expanded to cover an area of 600 acres.
From his home at Russell Square in London Holford began his own art collection with, it was remarked, ‘an eye for quality and the means to indulge it without stint’, and was admitted a member of the Society of Dilettanti, 6 June 1841. He specialised in the Italian Renaissance but, with the assistance of the dealer William Buchanan, between 1840 and 1860 he also accumulated paintings by Rubens, Velasquez, Van Dyck and Poussin, as well as ‘one of the most perfect extant collections of Rembrandt’s etchings’, sculptures, tapestries, porcelain, furniture, and a very fine library of illuminated manuscripts and early printed books.
In 1849 Holroyd purchased the freehold of the old Dorchester House in London and commissioned a ‘beautiful Italian palace’ from the architect Lewis Vulliamy in which to display his art collection. The building became the most conspicuous feature of Park Lane and took seven years to complete.
Having promised ‘uncompromising opposition to hasty innovations, or organic changes’, Holford also agreed to promote improvements ‘which the lapse of time may render imperative’, and took his place in the Commons alongside his brother-in-law, Robert Blagden Hale of Alderley Park, who had sat for West Gloucestershire since 1836. At his nomination it was stated that Holford regarded the campaign in the Crimea as a ‘just and necessary’ war of ‘civilisation against barbarism’, and would therefore support measures brought forward by ‘whatever political party’ that appeared necessary for ‘the vigorous prosecution of hostilities’.
A lax attender, who is not known to have spoken in debate, Holford did not introduce any bills, and voted in just 31 of the 196 divisions taken in 1856.
Holford consistently opposed the admission of Jews to parliament, dividing in favour of two amendments to the oaths bill which aimed to exclude them, 15 June 1857, 22 Mar. 1858. However, between 1856 and 1861 he regularly voted against motions to withdraw the existing grant to Maynooth College. In July 1857 he sat on the Falkirk election committee. He voted against the Liberal ministry on the government of India bill, 18 Feb. 1858, and the second reading of the conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858.
Holford backed Conservative criticism of the commercial treaty with France, voting for amendments by Disraeli, 20 Feb. 1860, and Ducane, 24 Feb., and that month sat on the Great Yarmouth election committee.
Staunchly opposed to the abolition of university tests, Holford divided against government bills in 1864-6, and was in the minority that supported Cairns’s amendment to the Catholic oath bill, 12 June 1865, which proposed that Catholic members abjure any intention to subvert the established church or weaken Protestant government. He regularly voted against the abolition of church rates, having explained to his constituents in 1857 that he would not consent to abolish unconditionally the means ‘by which £300,000 or £400,000 a-year were raised, and the fabrics of our ancient churches repaired’.
Holford wished to see a speedy repeal of the malt tax and backed a motion for its reduction, 17 Apr. 1866. However, alert to the argument that this would ‘be a death-blow to indirect taxation’, he suggested to his constituents that the tax be substituted by a small duty on beer.
Convinced that the connection of church and state was ‘one of the greatest blessings which we possess’, Holford voted against Gladstone’s resolutions on the Irish establishment in April and May 1868, and was re-elected for Gloucestershire East as the staunch opponent of ‘the spoliation of the Irish Church’.
Holford’s chief interest remained the arts and horticulture. With Vulliamy, he rebuilt Westonbirt House to an Elizabethan design and at huge expense between 1863 and 1870. He was an original member of the Burlington Fine Arts Club, to which he loaned a portion of his art collection in 1888. His three daughters each married well, Margaret to Albert Parker, 3rd Earl Morley in 1876, Alice to Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey in 1877, and Evelyn to the merchant banker and art collector Sir Robert Henry Benson in 1887.
Holford died ‘after a long and painful illness’ at Dorchester House in February 1892.
