Dorothea Phillips | |
Other Names: | Mrs J H Phillips |
Birth Name: | Dorothea Mary Land |
Birth Date: | 2 April 1886 |
Birth Place: | Halifax, West Yorkshire, England |
Death Place: | Great Somerford, Wiltshire, England |
Relatives: | Mark Phillips (grandson) Albert Joseph Moore (great uncle) Henry Moore (great uncle) John Collingham Moore (great uncle) |
Dorothea Mary Phillips (2 April 188622 September 1973) was an English social organiser. From 1951 to 1958 she represented Oldbury Parish on the Atherstone Rural Council.[1] She was the grandmother of Mark Phillips and great-niece of the painter Henry Moore R.A.[2]
Phillips was the daughter of William Henry Land, the managing director of Jess’ Quarry, Hartshill, and Kate Eliza Land née Moore. She was born in Halifax and had one sister, Sybil Catherine Land. Her great-great uncle was William Moore, a portrait painter and her great-uncles included the artists Albert Joseph Moore, Henry Moore (painter) and John Collingham Moore.[3]
She married Joseph "Joe" Herbert Phillips (1881–1951) on 10 April 1912 at Holy Trinity, Hartshill. They lived at Oldbury Grange in Atherstone. He was the son of William Garside Phillips, an early managing director of Ansley Hall Colliery, a role that Joe had assumed from 1905 until nationalisation in 1947. They had three children:
Phillips was a painter,[5] children’s clothes designer,[6] horsewoman and “all-round athlete”.[7] She was a regular follower of the Atherstone hunt.[8] In 1958 she moved to Great Somerford, Wiltshire. In 1963 she made a “remarkable recovery from a serious internal operation” at a Bath hospital.[9]
She died in September 1973 in Wiltshire, and was buried alongside her husband in the family vault at St Laurence Church, Ansley.[10] Amid great secrecy, her funeral was attended by Captain Mark Phillips and his then fiancée, Princess Anne.[11] “Elaborate precautions” were taken to ensure that the funeral did not become a “royal funfair”.[12]
Phillips was involved with many local and national organisations, including:
In 1924 she led the Duke of York, the future George VI, on a tour of the newly opened Warwickshire Miners’ Convalescent Home at Higham Grange.[22] In 1934 she and her husband donated a “finely carved old chair” to the Atherstone Rural District Council Chamber.[23]
Her war service included the Land Army, fire-watching[24] and supporting Warwickshire’s war supply service.[25] In 1942 she “hit upon a novel idea in order that she might raise money for the provision of emergency kits for men serving on destroyers” by selling flowers from her garden at the weekly market in Nuneaton. She donated £50 to both the Merchant Navy Comfort League[26] and The Mission to Seamen.[27]
When her husband died in 1951, Phillips took his place on the Atherstone Rural Council as the representative of Oldbury Parish, a position she held for seven years.[28]