Page 109 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 109

INHERITANCE                      93
       amalgamated with the North East Railway which in turn became
       part of the London and North Eastern Railway. It was a condition
       of the new arrangement that Hugh Bell became a director of all
       the companies concerned. As a result, the Bells became exceedingly
       rich in terms of liquid cash overnight. Part of the money was
       invested in new family estates. Part was distributed to grand­
       children, nephews and nieces, all of whom received £5,000. The
       residue went to Gertrude’s father. An incidental consequence of
       the arrangement was that Hugh, in becoming a director of the
       London and North Eastern Railway, found himself at board
       meetings sitting alongside Sir Edward Grey, soon to become
       Britain’s Foreign Secretary.
         Three years later, five days before Christmas in 1904, Sir
       Lowthian died at his London home at the age of eighty-eight. His
       passing went virtually unnoticed. In November of that year
       Gertrude had visited him at Belgrave Terrace, and wrote to her
       stepmother: T called on Grandpapa ... He was very doddery I
       thought, poor old dear.’ It was the last surviving comment on
       him, apart from an obituary in The Tims. When he died Gertrude
       was in Paris on her way once more to the Middle East. Her father
       had inherited the baronetcy and the residue of his estate, three-
       quarters of a million pounds. The new Lady Bell, in the collected
       letters of Gertrude which she published years later, mentioned
       that 1904 was the year in which her daughter Molly married
       Charles Trevelyan, thus establishing another link with a family of
       many talents, but she does not refer to the death of Sir Lowthian.
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