Publications
Proclamation against Sir William Wyndham, by F. H. Arnold, published 1879 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 29, notes & queries, pp.235-236) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 2114] & The Keep [LIB/500247] & S.A.S. library View Online
A Family History: 1688-1837; the Wyndhams of Somerset, Sussex and Wiltshire, by Hugh Archibald Wyndham, published 1950 (64 pp., Oxford University Press) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 224] & West Sussex Libraries
The Minute Book of the Petworth Turnpike Trustees, 1757-1801, by Hugh Archibald Wyndham, F.S.A., 4th Baron Leconfield, published 1957 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 95, article, pp.105-115) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 2180] & The Keep [LIB/500334] & S.A.S. library
The Cousins: The Friendship, Opinions and Activities of Wilfrid Scawen Blunt and George Wyndham, by Max Egremont, published 1 January 1977 (309 pp., HarperCollins, ISBN-10: 0002161346 & ISBN-13: 9780002161343) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries
The 2nd Earl of Egremont's sculpture gallery at Petworth: a plan by Charles Townley, by Ruth Guilding, published 2000 in Apollo : the international magazine of art and antiques (vol. 151, issue 458, article, pp.27-29)
Lord Egremont and Flaxman's "St Michael overcoming Satan', by Philip McEvansoneya, published June 2001 in Burlington Magazine (vol. 143, no. 1179, article, pp.351-359)
Sculpture by John Flaxman (1755-1826), made about 1826, at Petworth House.
Power, paternalism, patronage and philanthropy: the Wyndhams and the new Poor Law in Petworth, by Spencer Thomas, published 2002 in Local Historian (vol. 32, no. 2, article, pp.99-117)
Lord Egremont's dogs: the cynosure of Turner's Petworth landscapes, by Martin Wallen, published 2006 in English Literary History (vol. 73, no. 4, article, pp.855-883)
Agents and professionalisation : improvement on the Egremont estates c.1770 to c.1860 , by Sarah Ann Webster, 2011 at Nottingham University (Ph.D. thesis) View Online
Abstract:This thesis examines aspects of estate improvement on the Egremont estates in Sussex, Yorkshire and Australia between 1770 and 1860. Using the Petworth House Archives and others, it documents large-scale improvement projects, including William Smith's work in mineral prospecting in West Yorkshire, and Colonel Wyndham's land speculation in South Australia. The third Earl of Egremont (1751-1837) himself has received some biographical attention, but this has concentrated to a great extent on his patronage of the arts. This thesis therefore documents a number of important matters for the first time, in particular the detailed work of the middle layer of personnel involved in estate management and improvement. Episodes of 'failure' in estate improvement are also revealing in this study. This thesis contributes to debates regarding the nature of 'improvement' in this period, and most particularly, to understandings of the developing rural professions and to scholarship regarding professionalisation; interpreting key episodes in the archive utilising a 'landscape' approach. It uses the concept of an 'estate landscape' to draw together the dispersed Egremont estates in order to better understand the management structures of these estates, and how they relate to the home estate at Petworth.The thesis examines the relationships between Lord Egremont and the various agents (in the widest sense) who acted on his behalf; the configuration of which agents was different for each of the different estates. It makes a particular contribution to ongoing debates about the formation of the professions in eighteenth and nineteenth-century England in suggesting that despite the contemporary stress on applied agricultural expertise, legal land agents remained more influential than has been supposed. The belated professionalisation of the Petworth agents and the significant differences in their roles when compared with a land agency firm such as Kent, Claridge and Pearce suggests that estate management was far more diverse than has been suggested. Egremont himself emerges from the archive as neither a hands-on agricultural improver nor as an uninterested and neglectful absentee. Instead, I suggest, he acted as co-ordinator and as an impresario amongst the men engaged to act on his behalf, the middle layer of developing rural professionals including agents, surveyors, and engineers. If the literature to date has concentrated on Egremont as patron of art, he emerges from this thesis as a patron of improvement.
East Lodge, the Brighton home of George O'Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont, by Sue Berry, published 2014 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 152, article, pp.233-236) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 18617] & The Keep [LIB/508097] & S.A.S. library