Nicholas Van Hoogstraten

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The Hoogstratens were all regular attenders of Mass at St Joseph’s, the Roman Catholic church in Rustington. Nick, however, would soon throw off Catholicism. ‘Religion and politics are used to pervert and control ignorant people,’ he says. ‘If you’ve got a brain for yourself you know what’s right and wrong.’ — location: 104

interesting in light of both his behaviour and his later questioning. presuming that he still feels this, it seems likely that a moral superstructure exists that delineates right and wrong in ways nearly everyone else finds impossible to agree with. suggest this superstructure is money, which comprises fairly raw essences of law and morality, deprived of all other elements of social contract.


She was a floating luxury hotel with swimming pools, mahogany-panelled cocktail lounges, marble statues and cinemas. The saloons glittered with crystal chandeliers. Each cabin had its own en-suite bathroom – a real luxury in those days. She was advertised as being ‘a class apart’. — location: 165

the aesthetic of nvh


Music was only one of Nick’s ventures. He opened a boutique, Deb, in Brighton’s modish Regency Parade and he sank money into the rag trade. For the boutique’s champagne launch he hired Jimmy Saville, one of the best-known disc jockeys of the day. — location: 353


Van Hoogstraten once implied that he’d had dealings with Rachman. It seems unlikely. Rachman died in 1962, a year before the younger man first got into the property business. — location: 382

see Lynn barber?


Social historian David Gladstone got to know some of them, Van Hoogstraten included. ‘They tended to be anti-establishment and anti-professional,’ he says. ‘They were iconoclasts and consciously against the status quo. They had become very successful not through the help of professionals but by their own efforts. Their view on life was that they’d got where they were unaided, and that was how the world should operate.’ — location: 437


The climax was a screaming row between the two former friends in the boutique in Brighton that Jimmy Saville had opened only a few months earlier. — location: 471


But when one of the police remarked to him that it would take a lot of money to kill every Jew in Brighton, Van Hoogstraten’s black humour got the better of him: ‘I could get the money and it is not such a bad idea after all.’ — location: 489

humour is interesting


He already had the swanky cars. He wore amazing clothes. He was buying antique French furniture. But he wanted more of the trappings of great wealth. He wanted to be a collector of rare objects, including jewels and silver, and he didn’t much care how he got them. — location: 577


This time the cause of his downfall would be his ceaseless desire to get everything on the cheap or, better still, get it for nothing — location: 661


Van Hoogstraten took to Markworth at first sight and Markworth to him. There is no doubt that there was a special affinity between Van Hoogstraten and Markworth. — location: 751


‘We rang the doorbell … to be greeted by a very strange-looking individual who opened the door. He was wearing – in the middle of the day – a cream dressing gown that was slightly open. He had on a pair of purple underpants and a pair of purple slippers. And his face seemed to be caked in what looked like foundation … a bit strange.’ — location: 807


‘War has been declared. And in due course just retributions [sic] will be taken as further opportunities arise.’ — location: 928

retributions


He emerged from it claiming to be psychic and calling himself ‘a child of the Sun’. He was destined, he told friends, to live in a white marble palace on a hill. — location: 955


Van Hoogstraten, far away in Paris, was only too happy to take responsibility for what the press called the ‘Sussex siege’. The day after the evacuation he phoned the Evening Argus to put his side of it. As always, he was convinced that right was on his side. ‘We have £150,000 tied up in this property. The tenants are £8000 in arrears although they’re drawing £800 a week from the residents.’ ‘Don’t think these people have been unjustly treated,’ he added. He had been seeking possession for months. ‘I stalled off doing anything drastic or morally wrong, if you like, until the old folks had been removed. But we have had considerable trouble with East Sussex Social Services in moving them out.’ — location: 1040

mysterious morality. it’s not clear that he doesn’t think he’s doing right.


He is, when you see him, right there, in a deliberate, self-made sense. You feel he wants you to experience him. The problem is, how exactly? He says everyone, the media especially, gets him wrong. It’s no wonder. He is difficult to read. — location: 1098


She and Van Hoogstraten have two children, both boys. The younger child, now about eleven, is called Louis, after Louis XIV, the Sun King, whose masterpiece was the Palace of Versailles. — location: 1210

wonder whether I made a mistake about the Louis XV furniture. it could be the sun king part that’s important.


To a man like Nicholas van Hoogstraten, wealth is a measure of self-worth. — location: 1249

this is true but not detailed enough to be useful. his political philosophy is that anyone who doesn’t own their own house is a serf or chattel. gradations of wealth below house ownership don’t count (wd be interesting to seek is he views other capital - property may be the basic requirement)

wealth itself is probably more like a spiritual metric.

it’s like the legal universe is that of urizen - material but spiritually imperfect and constraining.

the actual universe is best defined by brutal violence ‘whatever is necessary’ and is potentially illimitable tho assuming necessity may come up against necessity of another, it potentially results in final confrontations.

he is peculiarly honest - S’s point about the Jesuits?

law is a fallen version of his morality


— location: 1252

author locates the religion mysticism elsewhere but I’d need to see eschatological questioning based around the deal. deals for NH seem to be more about accumulating wealth.

he may well subscribe to the Marxist doctrine all property is theft!


— location: 1260

think this is all wrong - NH doesn’t care about the deal, he cares about acquisition.


‘It has been said that no man is an island. Well, I am. Money gives me the power to get and demand what I want. I want nobody. I need nobody… I ask nothing of anybody other than the right to go on with my life the way I want to lead it not as others would run it for me.’ — location: 1268

I must create a new system


His attitude to the laws of the land in this period was totally cavalier. They were a challenge – to be circumvented, defied and wherever possible mocked. — location: 1307


At the time he was wearing a two-thousand-year-old Egyptian necklace made of gold and worth ‘in excess of £100,000’. — location: 1316


As many as fifty of the seized properties had no tenants. They had been emptied before the Revenue struck. Van Hoogstraten wasn’t going to spend money on maintaining them. Most were boarded up and left to moulder. — location: 1337


Van Hoogstraten knew what he wanted. He described being inspired by Buckingham Palace. ‘I went there when I was in my late teens to collect some items from King George V’s stamp collection. When you go in initially it’s through what looks like a medieval flagstone courtyard area which extends into the ground floor. Then, when you go up that grand staircase, you are in what I presume is — location: 1395


the formal salon and you’re hit with what all the money in the world can’t buy… I wanted to replicate that impression you get.’ — location: 1398

two this interesting: one, his knowledge of the language and history of property. 2, “all the things money can’t buy”

a nabob’s envy? elevation beyond pure finance. longs to live in the 18th Century (see capital) as a rentier (which is of course what he is). lands and a legitimised armorial/dynasty. note he is not an industrialist in any way.


purple. He wears a purple ring and a purple armband. He told me it was a royal colour and he regards himself as royalty, and that’s why he’s building himself a palace.’ — location: 1416

royalty again


As Van Hoogstraten has large investments in Africa, one can assume that this rare admission does indeed mean that his fortune has been recently declining. One former friend puts his wealth at a figure as low as £30 million, but the true amount must be higher. There was a time in his glory days when he made more than that in a year. — location: 1437

declining wealth certainly possible explanation of his change in manner.


‘I’m very frugal but I do like properly cooked plain English food. The French and Italians seem just to eat chopped-up rubbish covered in sauces. — location: 1607


‘I was brought up a strict Roman Catholic and I believe that there is an ultimate supernatural force. But all organised religions are man-made and were invented by some man who was a bit cleverer and they are just used as a way of keeping the population under control. ‘I have my own religion which is power. I control the lives of hundreds and thousands of people just by making decisions about whether to buy or sell a particular business. ‘I believe that might is right. The clever and the strong will always survive. ‘I believe that all property is theft. If you go back in history all land and property is owned by someone because they nicked it from someone else. — location: 1611


Oddly for a man judged to have broken the law so many times, Raja clearly brought up his family to respect it. He and Sarbie had three more children, all girls, and each one became a lawyer. — location: 2297


Mean in so many things, Van Hoogstraten has always been generous with advice – where to live, who to trust (or more usually who not to trust), when to buy, when to sell. — location: 2347

why?


As he reached his fifties, Nicholas van Hoogstraten had begun to wonder about his own mortality. ‘For the first time in my life in the last few years I’ve been involved personally with people who have died, dealing with funerals and that sort of thing. And I don’t like the feeling,’ he told one of the authors in 1997. — location: 2494


But in the next breath this vainest of men was mocking himself for being so mean about everything else: ‘We do things and we don’t exactly know why. Most of the things that I do, from when I get up to when I go to sleep, I don’t know why I am doing them. I wonder to myself sometimes why I am wasting my time using second-class stamps to save sixpence. Even if I do it a million times it adds up to a hill of beans.’ In this confessional mood Van Hoogstraten then admitted why the monument he was building, and the kids he had fathered, wouldn’t bear his family name. ‘The name is Hamilton Palace… Hamilton after Hamilton, capital of Bermuda. It was one of the few places in my youth that I fell in love with… My children are called Hamilton. It’s a fine colonial name … and I couldn’t foist my own terrible name on them, innocent children.’ — location: 2535


Croke got twenty-three years, reduced to twenty on appeal. His many victims got a lifetime of trauma after being held captive, bound and gagged, threatened with guns and – ultimate horror – having what they thought were real bombs strapped to their bodies. — location: 2810

sherlock


had misdirected the jury and the conviction would be overturned. He wrote that his enemies would all have ‘egg on their faces when my wrongful conviction is quashed shortly, as it will have to be.’ In an afterthought, Van Hoogstraten – who hates to be thought well of – crossed out ‘egg’ before ‘on their faces’ and substituted in capital letters ‘SHIT’. — location: 3378