Monday 20 May 2013

Cliveden, Buckinghamshire

The British Journal of Nursing, April 17, 1915

"It would be difficult to imagine a more peaceful haven, after the storm of shot and shell, the booming of guns, and all the horrors and stress of battle, than the hospital which has been equipped by the Canadian Red Cross, on Mr Waldorf Astor's beautiful estate Cliveden in Buckinghamshire."

Click here to read the whole article.



Cliveden is now a National Trust property and also a luxury hotel. To find out more, click here.


There is a website dedicated to the Canadian Red Cross Memorial Hospital, Taplow with many fascinating photographs and even ghost stories and a virtual tour - click here.


The War Memorial Garden - click here.

The cemetery was used by the hospital at Taplow which, from December 1914 to September 1917, was known as the Duchess of Connaught Canadian Red Cross Hospital and then, until September 1919, became No 15 Canadian General Hospital. There are also one Canadian and one British burial of the 1939-1945 War.


From the Guardian newspaper, January 2012 (full story here):

It took the British ruling class years to accept that the Astor family, into which David Cameron has married, were true aristocrats. They were American immigrants, doubly damned because they had made their fortune in "trade". The Astors soothed suspicions by entertaining in style at Cliveden, their Italianate mansion on the edge of the Chilterns. In the 1930s, Waldorf Astor, the second viscount, and his wife, Nancy, increased their prestige by making their home the social centre for the pro-appeasement wing of the Conservative party.

David Astor, a great editor of this newspaper, could not abide the portrayal of his parents as Hitler's stooges by the left of his day. Less partial observers did not deny that Nazi sympathisers were always welcome guests. Hatred of war, antisemitism and, above all, fear of communism drove the Astors on. They saw Nazism as a bulwark against a Bolshevism that might one day rob them of their wealth. Although the British Communist party was a tiny force, they believed Britain should not fight Germany for fear of bringing on revolution. A Tory from Churchill's camp encapsulated the Astors' paranoid delusions, when he cut them with the magnificent put-down: "I see you are prepared to put the supposed interests of your adopted class before the real interests of your adopted country."