Lucy Baldwin Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Countess Baldwin
Birth Name:Lucy Ridsdale
Birth Date:1869 6, df=yes
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Astley Hall, Worcestershire, England
Resting Place:Worcester Cathedral
Children:7, including Oliver Ridsdale and Arthur Windham
Known For:Spouse of the prime minister of the United Kingdom (1923–24; 1924–29; 1935–37)

Lucy Baldwin, Countess Baldwin of Bewdley, (; 19 June 1869 – 17 June 1945) was an English writer and activist for maternal health. From 1892 until her death in 1945, she was the wife of Stanley Baldwin, three-time Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. She was invested as a Dame of Grace, Order of Saint John of Jerusalem and a Dame Grand Cross, Order of the British Empire, and styled as Countess Baldwin of Bewdley on 8 June 1937.[1]

Family

She was born Lucy Ridsdale in Bayswater, London, the oldest daughter of Edward Lucas Jenks and Esther Lucy Ridsdale (née Thacker). Known as "Cissie", she grew up with her sister and three brothers in the village of Rottingdean, on the Sussex coast. Her brother Edward became a Member of Parliament for Brighton.[2]

She married Stanley Baldwin on 12 September 1892 in Rottingdean. Among the attendees were Stanley's aunt Alice and her son, Rudyard Kipling.[3] The couple had seven children:[1] [4] [5]

Interests and activities

As a girl, she was a member of the White Heather Club, the first women's cricket club, founded in 1887 at Nun Appleton Hall near Appleton Roebuck, Yorkshire. It was on the field where she met her future husband.[3] [6]

Apart from her home-making and raising of six children, she was also a formidable personality in her own right. She was very active and sociable, quite different from her husband in nature. Unlike her husband, she preferred the city life of London to the country. Their daughter Margaret Huntington-Whiteley said, "two people could not have been more unlike", but that "should they ever differ, it was always done quietly and politely." They shared the same deep Christian faith and moral outlook, and she was very supportive and encouraging of her husband. She often travelled with her husband during his time as prime minister, and she was an excellent speaker who found her own voice in politics.[4]

She was involved in the Young Women's Christian Association and other charitable bodies for women, especially those concerned to improve maternity care, after having herself suffered difficult pregnancies and the loss of her first child. In 1928, she became vice-chairman of the newly established National Birthday Trust Fund to address the high incidence of maternal mortality. Its original aims were to support maternity hospitals and contribute to the development of midwifery practice. In 1929, she helped found the Anæsthetics Appeal Fund with speeches, broadcasts and fund-raising. She was particularly concerned with reducing the pain of childbirth, and lobbied for new funds to make anaesthesia affordable for low-income women.[7] Her work contributed to the passage of the Midwives Act 1936. (See Royal College of Midwives.)

Death

She died suddenly of a heart attack in 1945 at Astley Hall, their country home in Worcestershire, She was cremated and her ashes were interred, with those of her husband, after his death in 1947 in the nave of Worcester Cathedral.[4]

Legacy

In honour of her work for maternity care, philanthropist and cricket enthusiast Julien Cahn donated funds to build the Lucy Baldwin Maternity Hospital in Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire.[8] It was commemorated by the prime minister on 16 April 1929, with a bronze dedication plaque over the main entrance reading .[9] It expanded beyond maternity and became known as the Lucy Baldwin Hospital until its closure in 2006.[10]

In the 1960s, a new device that administered a combination of Nitrous oxide and oxygen for obstetrics, was named the Lucy Baldwin Apparatus For Obstetric Analgesia.[11]

Baldwin also wrote valuable notes of two major events in politics, the fall of the Lloyd George ministry and the Abdication Crisis.[12]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lucy Ridsdale. The Peerage. 28 February 2015.
  2. Web site: Lucy Ridsdale (1869–1945). Stanford University. 28 February 2015.
  3. Book: A Circle of Sisters: Alice Kipling, Georgiana Burne-Jones, Agnes Poynter and Louisa Baldwin. Judith Flanders. W.W. Norton & Company. 2001. 28 February 2015. 240–242. 9780393052107.
  4. Book: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 3. 2004. Oxford University Press. Stuart Ball. 28 February 2015.
  5. Web site: Lady Leonora Stanley Baldwin (I19856). Stanford University. 28 February 2015.
  6. Book: No-Balls and Googlies: A Cricket Companion. Michael O'Mara Books. 2013. Geoff Tibballs. 73. 28 February 2015. 9781782430742.
  7. A Fund For Anaesthetics in Midwifery. British Medical Journal. Lucy Baldwin. 1 February 1930. 2312642. 10.1136/bmj.1.3604.220. 1. 3604. 220.
  8. Book: Baldwin Papers: A Conservative Statesman, 1908–1947. Cambridge University Press. 2004 . Philip Williamson . Edward Baldwin. 10. 28 February 2015. 9780521580809.
  9. News: Thieves smash piece of history at Lucy Baldwin hospital. Kidderminster Shuttle. Becky Carr. 27 June 2013. 28 February 2015.
  10. News: Changes to Lucy Baldwin Hospital development proposals. William Tomaney. 6 February 2013. 28 February 2015.
  11. Lucy Baldwin Apparatus For Obstetric Analgesia. British Journal of Anaesthesia. March 1962. XXXIV. 3. 28 February 2015.
  12. Book: Baldwin Papers: A Conservative Statesman, 1908–1947. Cambridge University Press. 2004 . Philip Williamson . Edward Baldwin. 10. 28 February 2015. 9780521580809.