Background
Charles Loraine was born in 1751. His father was Sir Charles Loraine, the 3rd baronet of Kirk Harle, and his family"s seat became Enderby Hall near Leicester when he gained an inheritance from his great uncle Richard Smith of Enderby.
painter High Sheriff of Leicestershire
Charles Loraine was born in 1751. His father was Sir Charles Loraine, the 3rd baronet of Kirk Harle, and his family"s seat became Enderby Hall near Leicester when he gained an inheritance from his great uncle Richard Smith of Enderby.
Loraine attended Eton College and Christ"s College, Cambridge.
He inherited his family seat in Enderby, Leicestershire while still a boy. He was a keen horseman and his paintings of animals are well regarded. He painted both parodies and more serious subjects.
He served in the British parliament, was mentioned in a divorce case, met the pope and rose to be a High Sheriff of Leicestershire.
He took his great-uncle"s name by an act of Parliament in 1762 whilst still a boy. Smith eloped with Frances Manners Countess of Tyrconnel.
This elopement was cited in the divorce of the Earl and Countess of Tyconnel in 1777. When Smith was in Florence he posed for a painting by Johann Zoffany of the Tribuna of the Uffizi.
Smith is shown in a group with Zoffany who is showing a painting by Raphael now called the Niccolini-Cowper Madonna after Earl Cowper who is also in the group.
Zoffany"s painting was a commission for Queen Charlotte and Zoffany had decided to include quite a few British people who lived in or who were visiting Florence. He supported Pitt the Younger"s plans for reform and he gave a number of speeches on the subjects of India, Canada and against the receipts tax and the slave trade. In 1783 Smith became the High Sheriff of Leicestershire.
The National Portrait Gallery has a copy of a print of a drawing by Smith whilst Leicester Museums has an oil painting by Smith of the Billesdon Coplow Run.
The Coplow run was a race on horseback for fox huntsmen that was celebrated in verse by the poetic bishop Robert Lowth. Smith used his knowledge of fox hunting and his artistic skills to paint parodies.
His titles included Loss of the Chaplain and his 1822 The Rendezvous of the Smoking Hunt at Braunstone. The latter parodies how fox hunting had become so fashionable that riders might smoke, even though this might prevent the dogs from finding the fox"s scent.
These paintings were produced as prints with engraving by J.Watson.
Smith was a celebrity because of his interest in fox hunting. Meynell was the master of the Quorn Hunt and Smith was entrusted with that role in Meynell"s absence. Smith wrote a self-deprecating poem on his skills, but there were several poems written and published about his exploits by others
His skills as a horseman enabled him to sell horses for large sums.
He sold one horse for three hundred pounds. He was reputedly grateful for being in good health to his 85th year.
Smith died on Sunday 23 August 1835 in his armchair. His celebrity was such that not only was a poem published in good humour about his imagined death many years before the event, but another poem which imagined his resurrection was written by Mr Heyrick in light-hearted reply.
Smith stood as a member of Parliament just once in 1784 for Leicester.
He was a good friend of Hugo Meynell, who was called "the first foxhunter in the kingdom".