º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

£750 Avon Carrow near Southam in Warwickshire

This imposing property was home to the MP at the centre of one of the great political dramas, reports Alison Jones

The name John Profumo has become synonymous with a striking period property – Cliveden, the Italianate mansion and estate at Taplow, Buckinghamshire.

Profumo, the MP for , and his wife, the actress Valerie Hobson, were staying there as guests of the owner, Bill Astor, the 3rd Viscount Astor, when he encountered aspiring model/call girl Christine Keeler, who had been staying in a cottage on the estate rented by Stephen Ward.

Profumo and Keeler had a brief affair. However, the fact she also bedded a Soviet intelligence officer and Profumo was, at the time, Secretary of State for War resulted in a scandal that led to his resignation in 1963.

Prime Minister Harold Macmillan quit on health grounds and, its reputation tainted by it all, the Conservative party was defeated at the next election.

As his political career crashed about his ears, it was not to Cliveden that Profumo retreated but to his home, Avon Carrow in Avon Dassett, near Southam in Warwickshire.

It had been the family home since his father purchased it in the 1920s.

When the press descended on the village, Profumo escaped from them via another property, The Limes.

Avon Carrow was sold in the late 60s, as Profumo and his wife based themselves in London and he redeemed himself through 40 years of charitable works.