THE grandfather of I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here! star Lord Charlie Brocket was a Nazi sympathiser who lived in Herefordshire during the Second World War.

Aristocrat Charlie entertained millions of television viewers with his jovial behaviour and pink tutu in the top-rated ITV reality show set in an Australian jungle.

The 52-year-old - who made it through to the final four in the show - had a keen eye for the ladies, but was seen clashing with former BBC Royal correspondent Jennie Bond, the runner-up to Jungle Queen Kerry McFadden.

Charlie's grandfather, Arthur Ronald Nall-Cain was the notorious Nazi sympathiser, the 2nd Baron Brocket, who lived at Kinnersley Castle in Herefordshire.

The Reavely family sold the Kinnersley Castle Estate to the 2nd Baron, who lived there until towards the end of the Second World War.

An active member of the Conservative Party, he developed extreme right-wing opinions and became a member of several anti-Semitic organisations.

Born into an English brewing family, the baron was educated at Eton and Oxford and worked as a barrister in London before becoming a Conservative Member of Parliament.

He hosted several meetings for supporters of Nazi Germany and was also a close associate of former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain.

He was a close friend of Von Ribbentrop and, in 1939, travelled to Nazi Germany with Major General John Fuller and Duke of Beccleuch to celebrate Adolf Hitler's 50th birthday. He continued to sympathise with the Nazis into the Second World War and came close to facing charges of treason.

He urged a negotiated peace settlement with Germany and worked closely in trying to arrange talks with Hitler.

The 2nd Baron was also famed for buying the Knoydart Estate, where he dismissed and evicted workers and chose to use the land for recreational shooting and fishing.

He eventually sold the Jacobean castle at Kinnersley - which contained 15 bedrooms, five bathrooms and had seven acres - in 1944. When he returned to Brocket Hall, he hired an entire train from Kinnersley station to move his belongings and stock.