“He drove a carriage harnessed to six zebras to Buckingham Palace” At the age of seven, Baron Lionel Walter Rothschild declared: “Mama, Papa, I am going to make a museum.” His prophecy proved accurate; by the age of ten, his zoological collection, featuring beetles, butterflies, birds, fish and mammals, was on display in a garden shed. By 13, Walter was in correspondence with prominent zoological experts and had employed a full-time adult assistant to help him catalogue the thousands of insects and other creatures he had started to collect.
Walter’s start in life, as heir to the famous Rothschild banking fortune, offered advantages, although it came with certain expectations too. Born in 1868, the shy, but physically imposing, child was something of a disappointment to his father, the first Lord…