Hilda Gordon-Lennox, Duchess of Richmond explained

Honorific-Prefix:Her Grace
The Duchess of Richmond
Father:Henry Brassey
Mother:Anna Harriet Stevenson
Birth Date:1872 6, df=yes

Hilda Madeline Gordon-Lennox, Duchess of Richmond (née Brassey; 16 June 1872 – 29 December 1971) was the daughter of Henry Brassey and Anna Harriet Stevenson (died 15 July 1898), and granddaughter of the railway pioneer Thomas Brassey. She was known as Lady Settrington from 1893 to 1903, and as Countess of March from 1903 to 1928, when her husband inherited the dukedom.

Lady Settrington joined her husband in South Africa in early 1900, when he served there during the Second Boer War.[1]

She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society in 1902,[2] and in 1927 she became the first chairman of the National Gardens Scheme.[3] She held the office of Justice of the Peace (JP) for Sussex and, later, Morayshire. She was invested as a CBE in the 1919 New Year Honours in recognition of her work with the Soldiers' and Sailors' Families Association, and as DBE in the 1946 New Year Honours in recognition of her work as Vice-President of the Soldiers', Sailors', and Airmen's Families Association.

She died in 1971, aged 99.

Family

On 8 June 1893 Hilda Madeline Brassey married Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, the 8th Duke of Richmond (born 30 December 1870 – died 7 May 1935); they had the following children:

References

Notes and References

  1. Court Circular. 16 March 1900 . 6 . 36091.
  2. Court Circular. 21 May 1902 . 9 . 36773.
  3. News: The Daily Telegraph . Lady Heald obituary . 31 August 2004 . 8 February 2014.
  4. Web site: Royal Weddings in Vogue . Vogue . 10 June 2023.