Overview
Webb continued to make a considerable profit from his properties and land. In 1861, Mr and Mrs Webb purchased Newstead Abbey in Ravenshead, Nottingham from Colonel Wildman. They outbid Queen Victoria to acquire Newstead Abbey. He moved his family into the Abbey, which is famous for being the former home of the poet Lord Byron and set about improving Newstead. Mr Webb installed central heating and gas lighting and also redecorated the old chapel. Mrs Webb also contributed by filling the house with Byron memorabilia and entertaining guests from all over the world.
Mr Webb spent much time in Africa with his good friends Captain Codrington and famous explorer Dr Livingstone, hunting big game. His 'treasures' can be seen in Newstead today; the tusks, skins and heads of the animals he caught while in Africa. Dr Livingstone was not only a great friend of William Webb, but also a friend of the whole family, as he made regular trips to Newstead, sometimes for as long as eight months.
William Webb was also a magistrate and in 1865 became High Sheriff of Nottingham.
In 1889, Mrs Webb became ill with tuberculosis and journeyed to Africa in October that year, in hope that the warm climate would help her recovery. However, on 28 December 1889, Emila Jane Webb died, aged 63. She was buried in the cemetery of St John's church, Wynberg, Cape Town, South Africa. The white marble grave is still in good condition as at 2009 and states her age at death as being 55. It features a design on it that reflects motifs seen throughout Newstead Abbey.
Ten years later, in 1899, Mr Webb contracted laryngitis while in Africa. He died from it and is buried at Luxor in Egypt.
When Webb died, Newstead Abbey was passed through each of his surviving children until Mr Webb's grandson Charles Ian Fraser sold it to Sir Julien Cahn, who then gave it to Nottingham City Council in 1931.
Read more about this topic: William Frederick Webb