Read The Viceroy's Daughters Online
Authors: Anne de Courcy
Amory, Mark (ed.),
The Letters of Ann Fleming
(Collins, 1985)
Asquith, Cynthia,
Diaries 1915â1918
(Hutchinson, 1968)
âââ,
Remember and Be Glad
(James Barrie, 1952)
Asquith, H. H.,
Letters to Venetia Stanley
, edited by Michael and Eleanor Brock (Oxford University Press, 1982)
Birkenhead, Lord,
Contemporary Personalities
(Cassell, 1924)
Bloch, Michael (ed.),
The Wallis and Edward Letters 1931â1937: The Intimate Correspondence of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1986)
Blow, Simon,
Fields Elysian
(J. M. Dent, 1983)
Blunt, Wilfred Scawen,
My Diaries
(Secker, 1932)
Bradford, Sarah,
Sacheverell Sitwell
(Sinclair-Stevenson, 1993)
Brett, Maurice (ed.),
Journals and Letters of Reginald, Viscount Esher 1903â1910
(Ivor Nicholson and Watson, 1934 and 1938)
Brownlow, Jack,
Melton Mowbray, Queen of the Shires
(Sycamore, 1980)
Campbell, Nina, and Caroline Seebohm,
Elsie de Wolfe: A Decorative Life
(Panache Press, 1992)
Chandos, Lord,
Memoirs
(Bodley Head, 1962)
Churchill, Randolph,
Lord Derby
(Heinemann, 1959)
Clayton, Michael,
Foxhunting in Paradise
(John Murray, 1993)
Collis, Maurice,
Nancy Astor
(Faber, 1960)
Cooper, Artemis,
Cairo in the War
(Hamish Hamilton, 1989)
Corbitt, F. J.,
Fit for a King
(Odhams Press, 1956)
Crathorne, James,
Cliveden: The Place and the People
(Collins and Brown, 1995)
Curzon, Grace Elvina,
Reminiscences
(Hutchinson, 1955)
D'Abernon, Viscount,
An Ambassador of Peace: Pages from the Diary of Viscount d'Abernon
(Hodder and Stoughton, 1929)
âââ,
Portraits and Appreciations
(Hodder and Stoughton, 1929)
Dennis, Geoffrey,
Coronation Commentary
(Dodd, Mead, 1937)
Donaldson, Frances,
Edward VIII: The Road to Abdication
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1974)
Egremont, Max,
Balfour: A Life of Arthur James Balfour
(Collins, 1980)
Fox, James,
The Langhorne Sisters
(Granta Books, 1998)
Furness, Thelma, and Gloria Vanderbilt,
Double Exposure
(Muller, 1959)
Gilmour, David,
Curzon
(John Murray, 1994)
Glyn, Sir Anthony,
Elinor Glyn
(Hutchinson, 1955)
Goldsmith, Barbara,
Little Gloria, Happy at Last
(Macmillan, 1980)
Hardinge, Helen,
Loyal to Three Kings
(Kimber, 1967)
Hardwick, Joan,
Addicted to Romance: The Life and Adventures of Elinor Glyn
(André Deutsch, 1994)
Hart Davis, Duff (ed.),
Letters and Journals of Sir Alan Lascelles: End of an Era, 1887â1920
(Hamish Hamilton, 1986)
âââ,
Letters and Journals of Sir Alan Lascelles: In Royal Service, 1920â1936
(Hamish Hamilton, 1989)
Hickman, Trevor,
Melton Mowbray in Old Photographs
(Alan Sutton, 1993)
Jebb, Miles (ed.),
The Diaries of Cynthia Gladwyn
(Constable, 1995)
Jones, Jack,
Unfinished Journey
(Hamish Hamilton, 1957)
Jones, Thomas,
A Diary with Letters
(Oxford University Press, 1954)
Langhorne, Elizabeth,
Nancy Astor and her Friends
(Arthur Baker, 1974)
Lees-Milne, James,
Harold Nicolson
(Chatto and Windus, 1981)
âââ,
Prophesying Peace
(Chatto and Windus, 1997)
Leslie, Anita,
Edwardians in Love
(Hutchinson, 1951)
Lowndes, Susan (ed.),
Dairies and Letters 1911â1947: Marie Belloc Lowndes
(Chatto and Windus, 1971)
MacKenzie, Norman and Jeanne (eds.),
The Diary of Beatrice Webb
, vol. 4: 1923â1943 (Virago, 1985)
Maxwell, Elsa,
Celebrity Circus
(Appleton, 1963)
Morgan, Janet,
Edwina Mountbatten: A Life of Her Own
(HarperCollins, 1981)
Mosley, Diana,
A Life of Contrasts
(Hamish Hamilton, 1977)
Mosley, Leonard,
Curzon: The End of an Epoch
(Longman, 1960)
Mosley, Nicholas,
Beyond the Pale: Memoirs of Sir Oswald Mosley and Family
(Secker and Warburg, 1993)
âââ,
Rules of the Game: Memoirs of Sir Oswald Mosley and Family
(Secker and Warburg, 1992)
Nicolson, Harold,
Curzon: The Last Phase
(Constable, 1934)
Nicolson, Nigel,
Mary Curzon
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1977)
Olson, Stanley (ed.),
Harold Nicolson Diaries, 1930â1964
(Collins, 1980)
Philpott, H. R. S.,
The Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas
(Sampson Low, 1932)
Pryce-Jones, Alan (ed.),
Little Innocents: Childhood Reminiscences
(Cobden-Sanderson, 1932)
Ravensdale, Irene,
In Many Rhythms
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1953)
Reed, Douglas,
Insanity Fair
(Cape, 1938)
Rhodes James, Robert,
Bob Boothby: A Portrait
(Hodder and Stoughton, 1991)
âââ,
Victor Cazalet: A Portrait
(Hamish Hamilton, 1976)
Roberts, Andrew,
The
Holy
Fox:
The
Life
of
Lord
Halifax
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1991)
Rose, Kenneth,
Superior Person: A Portrait of Curzon and his Circle in Late Victorian England
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1969)
Rose, N. A. (ed.),
Buffy: The Diaries of Blanche Dugdale, 1936â1947
(Valentine Mitchell, 1973)
Rubinstein, Arthur,
My Young Years
(Cape, 1973)
Russell, Audrey,
A Certain Voice
(Ross Anderson, 1984)
Sachs, Harvey,
Arthur Rubinstein
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1995)
Shaughnessy, Alfred,
Both Ends of the Candle
(Peter Owen, 1978)
âââ,
Sarah: The Letters and Diaries of a Courtier's Wife 1906â1936
(Peter Owen, 1989)
Sheean, Vincent,
Between the Thunder and the Storm
(Macmillan, 1944)
Skidelsky, Robert,
Oswald Mosley
(Macmillan, 1975)
Smart, Nick (ed.),
The Diaries and Letters of Robert Bernays, 1932â1939
(The Edwin Mellen Press, 1998)
Soames, Mary (ed.),
Speaking for Themselves: The Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill
(Doubleday, 1998)
Sykes, Christopher,
Nancy: The Life of Lady Astor
(Collins, 1972)
Thomas, Hugh,
John Strachey
(Eyre Methuen, 1973)
Wells Hood, Dina,
Working for the Windsors
(Wingate, 1957)
Westminster, Loelia,
Grace and Favour
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1961)
Windsor, Duchess of,
The Heart Has Its Reasons
(Michael Joseph, 1956)
Windsor, Duke of,
A King's Story
(Cassell, 1951)
Ziegler, Philip,
Edward VIII: The Official Biography
(Collins, 1990)
âââ,
Mountbatten
(Collins, 1985)
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader's search tools.
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Abdication crisis, 236â44
Ackroyd, Peter, 139
Acton, Harold, 133
Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI), 69, 72, 229, 233, 248, 264, 298, 306; and the Abdication crisis, 240â41
Alexander, Ulick, 243
Alexandra, Queen, 12
Alice, Princess, 215
Allen, George, 259, 261, 262
Allen, Paula and Bill, 210
Altemus, Liz, 225
Anderson, Sir John, 323, 325
Arlen, Michael, 157
Ashley, Sylvia, 119, 157
Askwith, Lady (Ellen), 178, 182, 187,
188
Asquith, Herbert Henry, 2, 32, 40, 99,
320
Asquith, Lady Cynthia (formerly Lady Cynthia Charteris), 1, 17, 42
Asquith, Margot, 5, 28, 143
Astaire, Fred and Adele, 118
Astor, Bill, 273, 276
Astor, David, 273, 277
Astor, Nancy, Viscountess: and Cliveden house parties, 23â24, 272â73, 277â78, 337; Curzon's friendship with, 23â24, 28, 31, 40; relations with the Curzon daughters, 24, 31, 41, 49â50, 54, 69â70, 78, 83â84, 113â14; and politics, 49â50, 133; and Cimmie's marriage to Tom Mosley, 56; and scandal involving Bobby Shaw, 153â55; and Grandi, 197; on Tom Mosley, 204; and Irene, 207; and Baba's children, 245; character, 272â73; and Lord Lothian, 338â39,
342
Astor, Waldorf, 2nd Viscount Astor, 23, 24, 50, 154, 155
Austria, and the Anchluss, 276
Â
Baldwin, Oliver, 145â46
Baldwin, Stanley, 66, 67, 76, 95, 99, 107, 125, 220, 229, 234, 260; and the Abdication crisis, 236â37, 238, 240, 241; on Wallis Simpson, 264â65
Balfour, Arthur (later Lord), 7, 11, 13, 41, 47, 66
Balsan, Consuelo (formerly Duchess of Marlborough), 83, 96â97
Balsan, Jacques, 96
Baring, Maurice, 121
Barry, Gerald, 204
Barrymore, Blanche, 119
Beaton, Cecil, 157, 258, 333
Beaverbrook, Lord, 344
Becket, Rupert, 337
Beckett, John, 271
Bedaux, Charles, 255, 258, 259, 261â62, 268, 269, 272
Bedaux, Fern, 255, 257, 258, 259
Bedford, Gertrude, 310
Belgian royal family, 33â34
Benes, Eduard, 284
Benson, Guy, 40
Beresford, Lord Charles, 3
Bernays, Robert, 177, 200â201, 223, 273, 292; and the Abdication crisis, 238â39, 241; and the Munich crisis,
284
Bevin, Ernest, 159, 359, 385
Birdwood, Lady, 104, 109
Birdwood, Sir William, 104
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen, 3
Bodiam Castle, Sussex, 37, 59, 100
Bonham-Carter, Violet, 345
Boothby, Robert, 108, 111, 121, 143, 145, 172, 174, 332, 335
Bowes-Lyon, Lady Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth), 72, 264, 304
Bracken, Brendan, 143, 174, 204â205, 218, 344
Brand, Bob, 114
Brand, Phyllis, 50
British Union of Fascists (later British Union), 173, 194, 203â205, 215, 220â21, 266, 324
Brown, W. J., 145, 148
Brownlow, Perry, 238, 261
Buckingham Palace: evening court, 68, 69; Garden Party (1923), 78; in wartime, 361â62
Bullock, Lady Victoria, 89
Bullock, Malcolm, 143
Burnaby, Algernon, 58â59
Â
Cadogan, Sir Alexander, 273, 276, 286
Camrose, Lord, 270â71, 397
Carlton House Terrace, 10, 13, 30, 59, 67; Irene's coming-out ball at, 32â33; entertaining at, 47â48; redecoration of, 47; Baba's coming-out ball at, 69â70; Baba's impromptu party at, 75; costs of running, 82
Carrington, Lord, 399
Castlerosse, Doris, 157, 173
Castlerosse, Lord, 187
Cazalet, Thelma, 216, 344
Cazalet, Victor, 216, 221, 252, 284, 361, 362, 364, 369; and Baba's relationship with Lord Halifax, 319, 334â35, 336, 351; at the Dorchester Hotel, 332â34; proposals of marriage to Irene, 343â44, 346â47, 349â50, 370; on Lord Halifax, 349; and Irene's visits to Great Swifts, 353, 362, 369; death, 372, 373
Chamberlain, Austen, 221
Chamberlain, Neville, 107, 252, 276, 277, 278, 291; and the Munich Agreement, 284, 285, 286
Channon, Chips, 84, 143, 202, 243
Chaplin, Charlie, 110
Charteris, Evan, 41
Chevalier, Maurice, 328
Cheyney, Peter, 153
Cholmondeley, Lady, 170
Churchill, Randolph, 262, 278, 295, 305, 306
Churchill, Winston, 46, 96, 97, 153, 218, 294, 302; and Wallis Simpson, 229, 233, 234; and the Abdication crisis, 238, 241, 242; and the wartime coalition government, 323; and Lord Halifax, 342, 369; and Duke of Windsor's
Liberty
interview, 345â46; and Mosley's imprisonment, 352, 358, 376; and the Viceroy of India question, 370, 371
Ciano, Count, 296
Citrine, Walter, 159
Clerk, Sir George, 332
Cleveland, Frances, 5
Cliveden house parties, 23â24, 143, 272â73, 276â78, 337
Colefax, Sybil, 111, 293, 314, 333, 352,
363
Cooper, Lady Diana, 78, 143, 185, 332,
334
Cooper, Sir Alfred Duff, 285, 332â33,
335
Corrigan, Laura, 118
Coward, Noël, 121, 157
Crabbet Club, 3
Craven Lodge, Melton Mowbray, 85â86, 112, 113, 114, 117
Cripps, Sir Stafford, 277
Cunard, Emerald, 111, 163, 164, 253,
333
Curzon, George Nathaniel, Marquis Curzon of Kedleston, 1â8; character, 1, 2, 41â42; birth, 2; spinal defect, 2, 76; attitudes to women, 3â4, 5â6, 31â32; marriage to Mary Leiter, 6â7; as Viceroy of India, 7â8, 10â13; relations with his daughters as children, 10â11, 16â19, 20, 29â30; relations with Irene, 18, 40, 43â45, 50â52, 53â54, 58â63, 69â71, 77; love affair with Elinor Glyn, 20â23, 24â27, 28â29, 30â31; friendship with Nancy Astor, 23â24, 28, 31, 40; and the Belgian royal family, 33â34; and the First World War, 33; and financial affairs, 36, 58â63, 81â82; marriage to Grace Duggan, 37â38, 39â43, 48, 49, 57â58; as Foreign Secretary, 47, 66, 76; relations with Cimmie, 48, 53â54, 62â63, 64â65, 70; relations with his stepchildren, 48, 77, 82, 100; relations with Baba, 53, 54, 83â84; and Cimmie's marriage to Tom Mosley, 55â57; created marquess, 61â62; political career, 66â67, 95â96; illness, 67â68, 96â98; and Baba's coming-out ball, 69â70; separations from Grace, 76â77, 78; and Baba's marriage to Fruity Metcalfe, 90, 94, 97â98; death, 98â99; funeral, 99; will, 99â100
Curzon, Grace
see
Duggan, Grace (later Lady Curzon)
Curzon, Lady Alexandra (“Baba”): birth, 1â2, 12; childhood, 29â30, 33, 34, 48; relations with Irene, 48, 109, 129, 151, 152, 184, 254, 350â51, 363â64, 373â75, 377â78, 379â80, 386â87, 388â89; relations with Lord Curzon, 53, 54, 83â84; and Cimmie's marriage to Tom Mosley, 56; settlement income, 52, 63; coming-out, 66, 67, 69â70, 71â72; appearance, 71â72, 142, 232; suitors, 71â72, 77, 78â79; holds impromptu party at Carlton House Terrace, 75; and Bobby Shaw, 78â79, 155; at Melton Mowbray, 86, 87; Fruity Metcalfe's courtship of, 87â88, 90â93, 94â95, 100â103; and Lord Curzon's death, 97â98; marriage to Fruity Metcalfe, 103â104; in India, 109, 110; birth of son David, 119; married life, 123, 133â34, 141â43, 168, 174, 188, 201â202, 232, 234â35, 275, 342â43, 382, 397; relations with Tom Mosley, 123, 176â77, 186, 189â93, 194, 200, 201, 202, 203, 208, 212â14, 215, 217, 218â20, 222, 225â26, 227, 234, 317; and politics, 133, 151, 177; and Master's club, 134; character, 142â43, 201â202, 279, 291, 335, 379â80, 399; sexuality, 142; work for Save the Children, 143, 202, 396, 398â99; birth of twin daughters, 143, 149; and Irene's engagement to Miles Graham, 180, 186â87; and Cimmie's illness and death, 183â85; affair with Grandi, 196, 197, 198, 204, 208â209, 214â15, 245, 296, 318, 393â94, 395â96; and the Prince of Wales set, 202; affair with Jock Whitney, 224â25, 230; thoughts of divorcing Fruity, 225; and Fruity at Schloss Enzesfeld with the Duke of Windsor, 250â51; and the wedding of the Duke of Windsor, 258, 259, 260â62, 263â65; affair with Michael Lubbock, 279, 320, 335; at the Villa La Cröe, 279â81, 296â97; and the Munich Agreement, 286; and Tom Mosley's marriage to Diana Guinness, 286â87; and Vivien Mosley's coming-out, 290â91, 292, 293, 294; training to be a nurse, 294; Fruity's wartime letters to, 300â302, 325â27, 347â48; accommodates the Windsors during the Second World War, 304â307; war work, 313, 334; and Little Compton, 314â15, 322, 330, 344, 359, 365, 393; relations with Lord Halifax, 318â20, 322, 330â31, 334â36, 337â39, 363â64, 374, 380â81; relations with Walter Monckton, 320, 322, 336; and the Duchess of Windsor, 322, 360â61, 383, 392â93; and the Duke of Windsor, 328; and Tom Mosley's imprisonment, 330â31, 335, 340, 350, 352, 358; at the Dorchester Hotel in wartime, 332â34, 337; and Halifax's appointment as British Ambassador to Washington, 339, 340â41; Lord Halifax's letters to, 341â43, 346â47, 348, 349, 351, 352â53, 355â58, 362â63, 365â66, 369, 370, 372â73, 380â81, 395; separation from Fruity, 351; and Fruity's return from Cairo, 366; and Tom Mosley's release from prison, 375â76; post-war visit to America, 386â87; post-war life, 391â99; letter from the Duke of Windsor to, 392â93; travels, 393, 395â96, 397; affair with Viscount Feversham, 394â95, 396â97; divorce from Fruity, 395, 396, 397; and the Ionian earthquake, 396; and Fruity's death, 397â98; awarded the CBE, 399; death, 399; hatred of the Mosleys, 399
Curzon, Lady Cynthia (“Cimmie”): birth 1â2; childhood, 8, 10â11, 44; at boarding school, 19; and Elinor Glyn, 25; spinal defect, 25â26, 29, 169; and the First World War, 41; admirers, 44; appearance, 45, 130; character, 45â46; meets Tom Mosley, 46â47; coming-out ball, 48, 49; relations with Lord Curzon, 48, 53â54, 62â63, 64â65, 70; Mosley's courtship of, 49â50, 53, 54â56, 84; marriage to Tom Mosley, 56â57; birth of children, 103, 106; and Baba's marriage, 103â104; married life, 105â108, 122, 131, 134, 140â41, 159, 163, 167, 171; and Mosley's infidelities, 105â106, 119, 130, 141, 158, 159, 169, 171â72, 176; and politics, 113, 121, 129â33, 135, 136â37, 138, 173; family home at Savehay Farm, 114; relations with Irene, 122â23, 131, 140â41; visit to Sidney and Beatrice Webb, 123â24; resignation from the Labour Party, 146â47, 148â49; and the New Party, 148, 149, 150â51, 162â63; car accident, 160; and Diana Guinness, 165, 169, 171â72, 174, 185; last pregnancy and birth of Micky, 167, 168; and Irene's engagement to Miles Graham, 180; illness and death, 182â85; memorial service for, 186; will, 205; and Nanny Hyslop, 213; Kennington Day Nursery in memory of, 215, 217â18
Curzon, Lady Irene (later Lady Ravensdale); birth, 1â2, 7; childhood, 10â11; relations with Lord Curzon, 18, 40, 43â45, 50â52, 53â54, 58â63, 69â71, 77; and hunting, 18â19, 41, 58â59, 290, 291, 292; education, 29; and music, 29, 292, 344, 390; coming-out ball, 32â33; appearance, 33, 108, 123, 179, 205, 227, 379; and Arthur Rubinstein, 34â35, 118, 127, 133, 140, 168â70; suitors, 40, 70â71; coming-of-age dance, 41; and the YMCA, 45; relations with Baba, 48, 109, 129, 151, 152, 184, 254, 350â51, 363â64, 373â75, 377â78, 379â80, 386â87, 388â89; and Cimmie's marriage to Tom Mosley, 56, 57; character, 70, 118â19, 123, 379; at Melton Mowbray, 76, 84, 111â13, 114, 117, 123, 139â40; social life, 78, 111â12, 113, 114, 121, 128, 139â41, 201, 293â94, 314, 363; and Lord Curzon's death, 97, 98â99; love affairs, 108â109, 113, 115, 118â19, 120â21, 127â29; love for Gordon Leith, 109, 111, 113, 114, 115, 119, 120, 121, 127â29, 133, 143, 157â58, 168, 188; travels, 109â10, 143, 160, 200â201, 214, 227, 292, 390; on Valentino's funeral, 110; relations with Tom Mosley, 119, 123, 129, 171, 194, 195â96, 205, 206, 208, 227â28; literary and theatrical friendships and interests, 121, 133, 140, 195; relations with Cimmie, 122â23, 131, 140â41; and politics, 131â33, 148, 204, 205, 290; in Antibes, 134, 157â58; relations with nephews and nieces, 140, 189, 193â94, 198, 199, 203, 210â12, 213â14, 217, 252, 266â68; at Cliveden, 143, 196, 204â205, 272â74, 276â78; health problems, 168, 170â71, 194, 196, 210, 291, 320, 374, 377, 382â83; and Mosley's fascism, 173â74; and Diana Guinness, 176, 289; engagement to Miles Graham, 178â82, 185â88, 198; and Cimmie's illness and death, 183â85; and Baba's marriage to Fruity Metcalfe, 188, 232; and Baba's relations with Tom Mosley, 189, 192, 194, 203, 205, 206, 209, 211, 212â14, 217, 219, 222, 230, 234â35; public works and good causes, 195, 282; and Grandi, 196, 197, 198, 209, 218; and Nevile Henderson, 199â200, 201, 206â207, 291, 292; Christmases with the Mosley children, 210â11, 244â45, 275, 320â21; holidays with the Mosley children, 213, 219, 231, 268, 282â83; and Kennington Day Nursery, 215, 217â18, 313, 314; and Tom Mosley's politics, 226, 295, 323; and Nazi Germany, 231â32, 276â77, 283â84, 285, 286; and Wallis Simpson, 233; and the Abdication crisis, 242; and Tom Mosley's marriage to Diana Guinness, 287, 288â90; and Vivien Mosley's coming-out, 288, 290â91, 292, 293, 294; and Diana Guinness's children, 292â93; and the outbreak of the Second World War, 298â99, 303â304; and the Mosley children in wartime, 308â10, 349, 350, 353â54; and the Windsors, 310; war work, 313â14, 320â21, 328, 334, 343, 344â45; and Baba's relations with Lord Halifax, 319, 334â35, 374â75, 380; drinking bouts, 320, 345, 362, 373, 382â83, 389; and Tom Mosley's imprisonment, 324â25, 370, 371; and the guardianship of the Mosley children, 328, 329; at the Dorchester Hotel in wartime, 332, 333â34, 337â38, 341; proposals of marriage from Victor Cazalet, 343â44, 346â47, 349, 370; public speaking, 348, 357, 363, 379, 389; visits to Victor Cazalet at Great Swifts, 353, 362, 369; and Victor Cazalet's death, 372, 373; and Tom Mosley's release from prison, 375, 376; post-war charity work, 385; post-war life, 386, 388â91; and Fruity Metcalfe, 387;
In Many Rhythms
, 390; life peerage, 390â91; death, 391