Charles James Eglantine Armytage-Moore (27 April 1880[1] – 10 December 1960), founder partner of London stockbrokers Buckmaster & Moore (now Credit Suisse Group).
Her daughter Lady Constance Malleson, was a writer and actress (appearing as Colette O'Niel) and long-time lover of Bertrand Russell the philosopher.
[2] Charles was the youngest son of William Armytage-Moore J.P. (1806–1883)[3] who managed the Annesley Estates at Castlewellan in Northern Ireland.
William Armytage-Moore (sometimes written 'Armitage-') married Mary Elizabeth Lockwood, née Metcalfe (1845–1932), in the British Embassy Paris on 8 June 1869.
Ethel (Ettie) Kathleen (1871–1891) who married Percy French the Irish composer and entertainer, but at the age of 20 she and her baby daughter died in childbirth.
John Reginald Rowallan (1876–1951), married Amy Campbell Johnston in 1909 in Vancouver, Canada, later travelled to New Zealand, joining the military and returning to England after WWI.
[6] Charles James, born in Dublin in 1880, his father had died when he was three, and he was educated at Repton School representing them at cricket in 1898, playing against Malvern College.
[10] A few months later she received news about her younger brother Second Lieutenant Armaund Francis Pappa, serving with the East Yorkshire Regiment had been killed in France on 5 May.
He developed into one of the country's leading players, taking part in the 1900 Olympic Games, and a member of the winning team in the International Polo Cup, in 1902.
John Maynard Keynes one of the firm's clients (also Burser of King's College, Cambridge), joined with Falk to form a syndicate to speculate in currency movements.
One particular red-flowered species (Rhododendron barbatum Wallich ex G. Don 1834) won an 'Award of Merit' when exhibited by Winterfold House in 1934.
During WW2 Winterfold was requisitioned by the British Government and used by Special Operations Executive, SOE, as a training school designated STS 7 as the location of the Student Assessment Board.