
THE
House of Carrington was a storied estate overlooking the English Channel at the mouth of the River Dart. Built just after the Great War, it was the center of a privileged world created by wine importer Andrew Carrington.
In its expansive salons, paneled libraries and grand ballrooms gathered the creme de la creme of British society, an enchanted circle of the mostly talented, the occasionally brilliant and the sometimes downright odd. All drawn together by the charm, grace and wit of Andrew Carrington — not to mention his seemingly endless supply of the world's finest wines.


