Elizabeth Home, Countess of Home

Elizabeth Gibbons
Countess of Home
Born1703/1704
Jamaica
Died15 January 1784
London
BuriedWestminster Abbey
Spouse(s)James Lawes
William Home, 8th Earl of Home
FatherWilliam Gibbons
MotherDeborah Favell

Elizabeth Home, Countess of Home (née Gibbons; 1703/04 – 15 January 1784) was a Jamaican-born heiress, noblewoman and absentee plantation owner. Already rich from her merchant father, she married James Lawes, the eligible son of Jamaica's governor, in 1720. They moved to London, and his death in 1734 left her a wealthy widow. Home married the spendthrift William Home, 8th Earl of Home in late 1742. He abandoned her soon after, and she spent her next years living an extravagant lifestyle. She owned plantations in the parishes of St Andrew and Vere in Jamaica, owning over 423 slaves on her plantations.[1]

Home earned the nickname "Queen of Hell" for her "irascible behaviour and lavish parties".[2][3] During the 1770s, Lady Home commissioned James Wyatt (and later the brothers Robert and James Adam) to design Home House, a lavish town house in Portman Square, London. It was then considered to have one of the finest interiors in London and still remains today. She died in 1784 and is buried in Westminster Abbey. Neither of her marriages produced any children.

  1. ^ "Elizabeth Home Countess of Home, formerly Lawes (née Gibbons) | Summary of Individual". Legacies of British Slave-ownership. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  2. ^ Inglis 2013.
  3. ^ Coutu 2006, p. 38.