Mr Nick's grandfather, Lionel, bought Exbury from the Mitford family in 1919. He employed 250 gardeners over several years to transform Exbury estate into a place to plant new trees and wonderful Rhododendrons which are now associated with the Exbury name and famous worldwide. To do this he needed to import tons of acidic soil as those shrubs would not have grown in the clay of the estate.
During WW2 the estate was taken over by the Navy, who called it (together with Beaulieu estate over the river) HMS Mastodon. There plans were made to create and ship the Mulberry Harbour across to France for D-Day, and people were trained to spy on events across the Channel, and support the French resistance.
Lionel de Rothschild’s son, Edward, inherited the estate on his father’s death, and ran it until he died just under two years ago. It was opened to the public in 1955, not long after the de Rothschilds were given it back by the Navy. Each owner has made his mark on Exbury, ‘Mr Nick’ being no exception!
Here are pics of Exbury House, the Beaulieu River which borders the eastern edge of the estate, and a couple of autumn blooms – a Dahlia and a late-flowering Azalea. Also here are pics of ‘Mr Nick’ and his amazing Nerines, colourful flowers which have a hard job competing with the man himself!
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