It is one of the pinnacle events of the English
summer social season, but Charles Harbord, the Harrow-educated aristocrat and
former Algarve
resident, will not be attending Royal Ascot this month.
He appeared to be in good spirits when photographed
at Ascot last year in top hat and tails, with
a champagne flute in hand, next to his party-loving daughters, Astrid and
Davina.
Appearances can be deceptive, of course. To some
outsiders, Charles Harbord was an upper crust snob. Those who knew him better
say he was an English gentleman of the sort you don’t often meet any more.
He was not a ‘Champagne Charlie’ as described in
the British tabloid press, said one of his old friends in the Algarve , “but he
liked a glass or two of wine – just like the rest of us.”
It turns out he also had financial worries - just like
the rest of us.
A fortnight ago, Charles Harbord shot himself in
his family home near Gillingham in Dorset . His wife and daughters were devastated.
Charles was a descendant of Harbord Harbord whom Prime
Minister William Pitt appointed 1st Baron Suffield in 1786. Charles’ second
wife Sarah-Juliet – SJ to her friends – is prominent in children’s charity
circles in the UK .
Their two daughters are close friends of Prince
Harry. Even before her romantic attachment
to Harry, Astrid was a companion of Kate
Middleton and attended Kate’s hen party before the wedding with Prince William.
Charles first came to the Algarve as a young man at the end
of the late 1960s or early 1970s. He and some of his pals once dressed up in
drag for a night on the town in Albufeira. Wearing kaftan dresses, wigs and
jewellery, they looked so authentic that they were prevented from entering
Albufeira’s renowned Harry’s Bar because the management had a ban on
“unescorted women”.
Moving back and forth between England and the Algarve , he lived well without
working, seemingly on inherited wealth. When he returned permanently less than
20 years later with his wife and two young daughters, he built a large, impressive house in the western Algarve .
An enigmatic figure, Charles had successfully
sleighed down the mighty Cresta Run in Switzerland . But he was unable to
ride a precursor of the jet ski in the calm waters at Meia Praia in Lagos Bay .
After falling off several times, he told the owner: “This thing's got some kind
of basic instability built into it.” It was Charles who had the instability.
Although in many ways a private man, he opened his Algarve home to art classes with tutors brought
out specially from England .
He didn’t seem to do it for profit.
An Algarve
businesswoman and artist who regularly attended recalls the Harbords as being
utterly charming. “The dinners at their home were delightful and always
featured lovely wines, but they were not flamboyant affairs,” she recalls.
Eventually, Charles sold the house and moved with
his family into rented accommodation. All the while the children had been attending
a local English-language primary school.
When they were ready for secondary school, the family returned to England for good.
After some years in a magnificent country mansion
in Wiltshire, the Harbords sold up and moved to the apartment in a Grade II
listed manor house where he chose to die.
Charles Harbord would seem to epitomise the fact
that while money cannot buy happiness, a lack of it often causes great
unhappiness. In these difficult economic times, an increasing number of people
in Portugal ,
regardless of ancestry, know that only too well.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) reports that in
the last 45 years, suicide rates have increased by 60% worldwide. Although
suicide has traditionally been highest among men in Charles Harbord’s age bracket (65 and
over), young people are now the group at highest risk in many countries. Youth
suicide is increasing at the greatest rate.
Depression is associated with the great majority of
suicide cases. Unemployment is one of the main contributing factors. Joblessness
fosters feelings of hopelessness. The number of unemployed in Portugal is expected to reach 16
per cent next year.
All that can be said in mitigation is that only a
small proportion of people who consider suicide, perhaps one in 200, actually
commit it.