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  1. A portrait of Lord Harewood by Joshua Reynolds. Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood ( c. 1713 – 25 January 1795) was a Barbadian-born planter, military officer, politician and peer.

  2. A fines del siglo XVII, los miembros de la familia Lascelles compraron plantaciones en las Indias Occidentales y los ingresos generados permitieron que Henry Lascelles comprara la propiedad en 1738; su hijo, Edwin Lascelles, primer barón Harewood, que era dueño de plantaciones y esclavos, construyó la casa entre 1759 y 1771 para reemplazar a Gaw...

  3. Edwin Lascelles, fourth son of the second Earl, sat as member of parliament for Ripon. Sir Alan Lascelles, son of the Honourable Frederick Canning Lascelles, second son of the fourth Earl, was Private Secretary to both George VI and Elizabeth II.

  4. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood (7 January 1740 – 3 April 1820) was a British landowner, art collector, peer and, before which, member of parliament. [1] He was the son of Edward Lascelles, a senior customs official in Barbados, himself a son of Daniel Lascelles.

  5. 28 de ago. de 2020 · 28 August 2020. The Lascelles Slavery Archive. 3/11, Release and sale: Henry Frere to Edwin Lascelles, 1787. The image shows part of the schedule relating to a legal release and sale document between Henry Frere and Edwin Lascelles, detailing a list of enslaved people.

  6. 22 de feb. de 2007 · Harewood House was built for Barbadian-born landowner, Edwin Lascelles (1713-95), to designs by architects John Carr and Robert Adam. At the time of its construction (1759-71), Edwin owned...

  7. Harewood House and the destruction of the Gawthorpe Hall. By Dr. Jonathan Finch, Reader, University of York. In 1771 Edwin Lascelles (1713-1795) took up resi-dence at his ‘New House at Gawthorpe’ which he had named Harewood House. Yet below the spec-tacular southern front of the house lay the ruins of Gawthorpe Hall, the medieval manor ...