More commonly known as Charlie Brocket, Lord Brocket comes from an ancient Irish family called O'Cahan. The name was changed to Cain when Robert O'Cahan emigrated to Liverpool in 1844 to start his brewery that became a household name and grew into Allied Breweries. Charlie was educated at Eton, carried out his practical training as an architect and then served five years with the 14th/20th King's Hussars, in Northern Ireland, the Middle East, Far East and Germany.
He inherited the family home, Brocket Hall, in 1971 in a semi-derelict state and took up his seat in the House of Lords the same year, specialising in tourism. Home to two Prime Ministers, Lord Melbourne and Lord Palmerston, he turned it into the premier high level conference venue in Europe, hosting numerous political summits between world leaders. In 1992 he built the first of two championship golf courses.

The success of the venture led Charlie to build up one of the world's largest collections of classic Ferraris and Maseratis, forty-two in total. These included three unique Ferraris, Lauda's 1971 formula one Ferrari and Fangio and Moss's legendary Maserati 300s, considered by many the best sports racing car of all time. Despite the acclaimed success of the conference business, his passion for Ferraris and the sudden collapse of the car market in 1991 led to financial problems with the car company leading to a fraudulent insurance claim. Despite the claim being withdrawn and this being a 'misdemeanor' in many other countries, the political sleaze issues at the time meant an example had to be shown resulting in a seven and a half year sentence and a tour of seven of Her Majesty's Prisons.
His subsequent autobiography, written with his Irish sense of humour, became a best seller and his spell in the jungle on "I'm a Celebrity, get me out of here" led to a TV career with programmes such as 'Bad Lad's Army' and 'Scream if You Want to Get Off!'. Since 1980 Charlie has been rallying, racing and writing about cars, judging concours events globally and contributing to programs such as 'The World's Top Ten Cars'.
More recently, since his marriage to travel photographer Harriet, he frequently writes on travel subjects but all in his own unique way in which he says it like it is. His opinions are often required as a result of his broad knowledge of history, architecture, building and interior design. Charlie has just returned from a forty day journey covering 10,000 miles through eighteen countries on a Harley Davidson from London to Algeria and then circumnavigating the Mediterranean to benefit the children's charity Click/Sargent. Charlie is currently working on a documentary for Bletchley park, the decoding center that reduced WWII by at least two years as few know of its achievements and the government does not consider it important enough to finance or prevent it from being demolished.
