The Soldier Museum
The 6th Marquess started collecting model soldiers as a
schoolboy. He was fascinated by the campaigns of the Napoleonic
period, and had great knowledge of the various battle and parade
formations, and of regimental uniforms.
Lord Cholmondeley served in the Royal Dragoons during the Second
World War, when he was awarded the Military Cross, and later
transferred to the Grenadier Guards for a further three years after
the war.
However, it was not until the 1950's, after he and his wife had
settled down at Cholmondeley, the family estate in Cheshire, that he
turned again to his soldier collection. He started ordering figures
from several sources in London, often commissioning whole scenes to
his specification. There are now examples of many different models
in the museum, all painted with great attention to detail.
While the largest tableau is a reconstruction of the Battle of
Waterloo, with the figures of Wellington and Napolean standing on
opposite hills, many other famous battles and periods of military
history are represented. For example, there are scenes from the
Franco-Prussian Wars, and two parade scenes depicting the German and
British armies c. 1880.
The backgrounds to many of the tableaux were painted by Ian
Weekley, and were commissioned when Lord Cholmondeley moved the
collection to Houghton for the opening of the museum. |