Margaret Elizabeth Leigh

Graves of the 7th (left) and 8th (right) Earls of Jersey in All Saints' parish churchyard, Middleton Stoney, Oxfordshire - Margaret is buried with her husband.

Margaret Elizabeth Leigh (29 October 1849 – 22 May 1945), later Margaret Elizabeth Leigh Child-Villiers, Countess of Jersey, was an English noblewoman, activist, writer and hymn-writer.

She was the daughter and eldest child of William Henry Leigh, 2nd Baron Leigh. On 19 September 1872 she married Victor Child Villiers, 7th Earl of Jersey. They had six children:

She was the founding president (1901–14) of the Victoria League and was known as an opponent of women's suffrage. She was the author of travel articles, children's plays, verse and hymns. In 1871 the Religious Tract Society published a small collection of her hymns and poems under the title of Hymns and Poems for very Little Children. A second series under the same title appeared in 1875. Six of these hymns were included in W. R. Stevenson's School Hymnal, 1880. Some of these are repeated in the Voice of Praise (London S. S. Union) and other collections.[2]

In 1920 she published A brief history of Osterly Park (her husband's seat) and in 1922 Fifty-One Years of Victorian Life.[3]

In 1903, she laid the foundation stone of Brentford Library,[4] and five years later she formally opened Hove Library.[5]

She was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1927. Having suffered a stroke in 1909, Lord Jersey died at Osterley Park, Middlesex,[6] in May 1915, aged 70 - Margaret survived her husband by 30 years and died at Middleton Park, Oxfordshire,[6] in May 1945, aged 95.[1][6]

References

  1. 1 2 thepeerage.com Victor Albert George Child-Villiers, 7th Earl of Island of Jersey
  2. Profile of Margaret Child Villiers, Countess of Jersey, hymnary.org; accessed 21 March 2016.
  3. A brief history of Osterly Park by the Dowager Countess of Jersey, 1920, from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF)
  4. A History of Brentford Library
  5. Middleton, Judy (2002). The Encyclopaedia of Hove & Portslade. 7. Brighton: Brighton & Hove Libraries. p. 129.
  6. 1 2 3 Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition: Jersey, seventh Earl of (1845–1915)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.