Sir William Bass, 2nd Baronet
Sir William Arthur Hamar Bass, 2nd Baronet (24 December 1879 – 28 February 1952) was a British racehorse owner and a significant contributor to the racing industry. He also provided support for the British film industry in its early days.
Biography
[edit]Bass was the son of Hamar Alfred Bass and his wife Louisa Bagot (1853–1942), daughter of William Bagot, 3rd Baron Bagot. His father's family traced its fortunes to William Bass, who founded the famous Bass brewery company.
He was educated at Harrow School and started at Trinity College, Cambridge, but appears to have decided to join the army instead.[1] He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 3rd Battalion, the East Surrey Regiment on 14 April 1898.[2] He transferred to the 10th (Prince of Wales's Own Royal) Hussars on 18 November 1899 and served in the Second Boer War in South Africa from 1900 to 1902, attached to a provisional regiment of hussars, during which he was promoted to lieutenant on 3 October 1900.[3] Following the end of the war, he returned from Cape Town to England in the SS Maplemore in August 1902.[4] In the First World War he served with the Reserve Regiments of Cavalry.
He lived at Byrkley Lodge in the Tatenhill area of Staffordshire. He succeeded to the baronetcy of Stafford in 1909 following the death of his uncle, Baron Burton.
Bass was first chairman of Provincial Cinematograph Theatres, which was founded in 1909 with the aim of opening a cinema in every town in the UK with a population of 250,000 or more. He also gave financial support to the London Film Company. However, Sir William (or Billy Bass as he was known) was most noted for his ownership of racehorses. He was a member and steward of the Jockey Club, was on the National Hunt Committee and joint Master of the Royal Hunt.[5] He enjoyed his first success in the Cesarewitch Handicap in 1903 with Grey Tick, and also owned the horses Rosedrop, Cyllene and Sceptre. He was a Steward of the Pony Turf Club and was involved in the foundation of Northolt Park Racecourse in 1929.
In 1947, along with others, Bass continued the family tradition of acting as a benefactor to the Burton upon Trent area by donating a peal of five bells to All Saints Church to be installed as a war memorial.
Family
[edit]Sir William married Lady (Wilmot Ida) Noreen Hastings (1880–1949),[6] second daughter of the 14th Earl of Huntingdon and a notable sportswoman,[7] in 1903, but died, aged 72, without having children, leading to the extinction of the baronetcy. He left his fortune to his wife's nephew, the trainer Peter Hastings (d. 1964) who changed his name to Hastings-Bass. Peter's eldest son William Edward Robin Hood Hastings-Bass (b. 1948) is the present and 17th Earl of Huntingdon.
Notes
[edit]- ^ There is no reference to him in Venn's Alumni Cantabrigienses
- ^ "No. 26963". The London Gazette. 3 May 1898. p. 2752.
- ^ Hart′s Army list, 1903
- ^ "The Army in South Africa - Return of Troops". The Times. No. 36847. London. 15 August 1902. p. 4.
- ^ "Horseracing History Online - Person Profile : William Bass". Archived from the original on 28 October 2007.
- ^ "Lady Noreen Bass, née (Wilmot Ida) Noreen Hastings (1880-1949)" from the Lafayette website. "Lady Noreen Bass, née (Wilmot Ida) Noreen Hastings (1880-1949) by Lafayette 1904". Archived from the original on 2 November 2006. Retrieved 10 October 2012.. Retrieved 3 October 2007
- ^ Lady Noreen Bass was most noted for snubbing Winston Churchill's mother Mrs George Cornwallis-West at the Newmarket races in 1909. See "Churchill Snubbed Because of Budget; Relatives and People of His Own Set Show Their Displeasure at His Diatribes. His Mother is also Cut Result Is That He Leans More and More to the Radicalism of Chancellor Lloyd-George." The New York Times, Sunday 19 December 1909. Section: Special Cable News Section, Page C3, 1089 words" [1]. Retrieved 3 October 2007.