Wenefryde Scott, 10th Countess of Dysart


Wenefryde Agatha Scott, 10th Countess of Dysart was a Scottish noblewoman.

Family

Wenefryde was the daughter of Charles Norman Scott and Agnes Mary Tollemache. Scott was a JP for the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright and a JP and DL for Leicestershire.
Her mother was one of the daughters of the controversial William Tollemache, Lord Huntingtower and received the precedence of an earl's daughter in a warrant of precedence granted in 1881.

Marriage and issue

Wenefryde's coming-out ball was hosted by her uncle, the 9th Earl of Dysart, at his seat at Ham House.
Wenyfryde married Major Owain Edward Whitehead Greaves of the Royal Horse Guards, grandson of the slate mine proprietor John Whitehead Greaves, on 4 January 1913. They had three daughters; Rosamund, Katherine and Mary.

Estate

Following the death of her mother in 1912, and Wenefryde's marriage soon after, Wenefryde inherited the Bosworth estate. This had been bought by her father but assigned to her mother as part of their marriage settlement. Wenefryde sold the estate and moved to Wales whilst her father retired to Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire.
She inherited the Scottish title of 10th Countess of Dysart, suo jure, on the death of her uncle William Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart, who died without issue in 1935. The inheritance brought with it further estate; the Leicestershire property including.
In 1939, Wenefryde purchased Stobo Castle, its ancient feudal barony and lands but rarely inhabited the castle due to the onset of war. Owain died there on 18 February 1941.
Parts of the wider estate were sold off over the following three decades and the castle and garden went into a slow decline. The Countess lived at Stobo until the mid-1960s, after which it lay empty until sold at auction by Sothebys in 1972.
Wenefryde Agatha Scott died 2 June 1975 and the Dysart title passed to eldest daughter, Rosamund.