Margaret Russell, Baroness Ampthill, CI, GCVO, GBE, DStJ (néeLady Margaret Lygon; 8 October 1874 – 12 December 1957) was an English courtier and Red Cross volunteer, known for her long friendship with Queen Mary.[1]
Lady Ampthill first became friends with Queen Mary in 1891, when she was known as Princess May. Lady Margaret was appointed a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Mary in 1911, but was honoured by four monarchs for her charity work.[1]
She died in hospital in London after a long illness.[1] After her death, Viscount Templewood eulogised her in The Times and commented on her friendship with Queen Mary:
The Queen and her Lady-in-Waiting could not have been better matched. Even in appearance they seemed specially designed for each other. Tall, dignified without being stiff, agreeable and sociable, with just that measure of reserve that adds distinction to personality, living examples of the rare art of deportment, each seemed to enhance the virtues of the other. It was qualities such as these that made King George's court a model of all courts and added to it a cachet of peculiar excellence. Friendship grew spontaneously in this fostering atmosphere, and quickly and surely the official relation between the Queen and her lady was transmuted into an intimate companionship that was only broken by Queen Mary's death.
Wing Commander Hon. Edward Wriothesley Curzon Russell OBE (2 June 1901 – 1982), married Baroness Barbara Korff and had issue
Brig Hon. Leopold Oliver Russell OBETD (26 January 1907 – 1988)
Hon. Phyllis Margaret Russell OBE (3 June 1909[4][5] – c. 16 April 1998), Lady-in-Waiting to Princess Mary, married William George Preston Thorold (annulled 1942)
Coat of arms of Margaret Russell, Baroness Ampthill
Escutcheon
Oliver Russell, 2nd Baron Ampthill (Argent a lion rampant Gules on a chief Sable three escallops Argent a mullet Or for difference) impaling Frederick Lygon, 6th Earl Beauchamp (Argent two lions passant in pale tails fourchée Gules).
Supporters
Dexter a lion sinister a heraldic antelope both Gules the latter ducally gorged lined armed and unguled Or and each charged with a mullet Or for difference.[6]
References
^ abcde"Dowager Lady Ampthill – 60 Years' Friendship with Queen Mary". The Times. 13 December 1957. p. 13.