The cat who jumped off a boat to find his 'forever family'

Galya DimitrovaKelmscott Manor
Meet Horatio - the official cat of Kelmscott Manor

Thirteen years ago, a large tabby cat jumped from a houseboat and wandered into a nearby 16th Century manor house, choosing to become the "wonderful resident cat" and becoming a firm favourite with staff and visitors alike.

Horatio decided that day to take up residence at Kelmscott Manor, the former country home of William Morris, best known today for his Victorian-era design work, near Faringdon in west Oxfordshire.

Curator Kathy Haslam says Horatio has found his "forever family" on the site.

"He adopted us and it wasn't until we took him to the vets that we realised he'd come off a boat. The person who owns the boat was very happy for him to come and live with us," she said.

Horatio has lived at the manor house ever since and is so well loved many visitors return to the manor just to see him.

News imageKelmscott Manor curator Kathy Haslam smiling for the camera. She is sitting inside the manor's summer house. Greenery could be seen growing around the fence behind her.
Kelmscott Manor curator Kathy Haslam says the manor staff have been "adopted" by Horatio

Haslam said it was "difficult to know who's more special" - William Morris or Horatio.

She recalls that the "gentle giant" tabby just turned up one day, having arrived from a boat on the River Thames.

News imageHoratio the cat squinting as he stands in the middle of a green space at Kelmscott Manor.
Manor staff call Horatio "the sweetest, most gentle soul" and "a gentle giant"

The curator adds Horatio even has his own bank account, which some of the staff pay into to cover some of his expenses such as vets bills.

Once, she explained, Horatio went missing "for the best part of a year" and "reappeared out of nowhere with a scar on his side".

He was then diagnosed with "a very rare condition".

"We didn't know at the time he was given a 50:50 chance of getting through that.

"That was a huge undertaking collectively for all of us with the medication and the treatment that he required," she said.

But Horatio, which Haslam said made "him even more precious to all of us".

"He's been pretty well since - he's quite a big cat, very much the alpha male."

News imageA view of the grounds of Kelmscott Manor and its buildings. It is cloudy.
Kelmscott Manor was the country home of William Morris

Over the years, Horatio settled in at the manor and gradually learned how to play with the toys brought to him.

He now has four beds in Haslam's office and an afternoon bench.

"He is just a member of our family," she says.

News imageA row of staff images on a wall at Kelmscott Manor that show Horatio next to property manager Gavin and administrator Gill. Horatio is listed as chief wellbeing officer.
Property and estate manager Gavin Williamson says Horatio is their "chief wellness officer" who is "good for a cuddle and a stroke" on stressful days

Haslam says that during a major project, which involved dozens of builders, the whole site "was in upheaval for two years" and everybody was concerned about Horatio.

"All the contractors fell in love with him and he coped with it amazingly, it didn't faze him at all.

"His welfare, even during that really disrupted period, was one of their priorities."

News imageProperty and estate manager Gavin Williamson petting the tabby cat Horatio on at Kelmscott Manor. It is a sunny day.
Property and estate manager Gavin Williamson says Horatio is also "quite a good mouser"

Property and estate manager Gavin Williamson says he does not mind to be "second in command" to Horatio.

"He has my chair in the office and I go and find another chair to sit on," he said, because that way "it's so much easier for me to be able to get on with all the work I need to be doing."

Williamson says Horatio is "always very soft" and what he would call "a gentle giant".

"He's definitely part of the team and he's a chief wellness officer, so he's good for a cuddle and a stroke when you need to go and calm down from the days of stress."

News imageHoratio the tabby cat in the middle of a flower field, nibbling on a stem an a leaf. There are many purple and yellow flowers.
Kathy Haslam says Horatio is "the sweetest, most gentle soul"

Haslam describes Horatio as "very dog-like" as he walks around the meadow every morning before breakfast and then looks for company for the rest of the day.

She adds that on open days, he "really enjoys" spending time with visitors.

News imageHoratio the tabby standing by a seating area at Kelmscott Manor. It is cloudy.
Horatio is always ready to welcome visitors at the manor grounds

"They say the same thing by the hundred, 'Isn't he lovely? Isn't he big?', and they just adore him as much as he adores them.

"We actually have some visitors who come back specifically to see him again, which is fabulous, so he clearly has his own fan club."