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May 1, 1920: Death of Princess Margaret of Connaught, Crown Princess of Sweden and Duchess of Scania.

02 Saturday May 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Royal, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Genealogy, This Day in Royal History

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Crown Princess of Sweden, Frederick Charles of Prussia, King Edward VII of the United Kingdom of Great Britain, King Gustaf V of Sweden, King Gustaf VI Adolph of Sweden, Louise Margaret of Prussia, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught, Prince Luís-Filipe of Braganza, Princess Margaret of Connaught, Princess Victoria Patricia of Connaught, Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom

Princess Margaret of Connaught (Margaret Victoria Charlotte Augusta Norah; January 15, 1882 – May 1, 1920) was Crown Princess of Sweden and Duchess of Scania as the first wife of the future King Gustaf VI Adolph of Sweden.

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Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom holding her granddaughter Princess Margaret of Connaught

Princess Margaret was the elder daughter of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, and his wife Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia. Her father, The Duke of Connaught was third son of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and her husband Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

Princess Margaret’s mother, Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia, was the daughter of Prince Friedrich-Charles of Prussia (1828–1885), the son of Charles of Prussia (1801–1883) and his wife Princess Marie of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1808–1877). Her mother was Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt (1837–1906), daughter of Leopold IV of Anhalt-Dessau. Louise Margaret of Prussia‘s father, was a nephew of the German Emperor Wilhelm I,and a double cousin of the German Emperor Friedrich III, the husband of her sister-in-law, Victoria, Princess Royal.

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Princess Margaret was born at Bagshot Park and baptised in the Private Chapel of Windsor Castle on March 11, 1882 by Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury. She was also confirmed in the Private Chapel of Windsor Castle in March 1898. Princess Margaret was known as “Daisy” to her family.

When Princess Margaret of Connaught was 23 and her younger sister Princess Patricia of Connaught was 18, both girls were among the most beautiful and eligible princesses in Europe. Their uncle, King Edward VII of the United Kingdom wanted his nieces to marry a European king or crown prince.

In January 1905, the Duke and Duchess of Connaught visited Portugal, where they were received by King Carlos and his wife, Amélie of Orléans, whose sons Luís-Filipe, Duke of Braganza and Prince Manuel entertained the young British princesses. The Portuguese expected one of the Connaught princesses would become the future Queen of Portugal. No marriage proposal materialized.

The Connaughts continued their trip to Egypt and Sudan. In Cairo, they met Prince Gustaf-Adolph of Sweden, the future Gustaf VI Adolph of Sweden, grandson of the Swedish King Oscar II. Originally, Margaret’s sister Patricia had been considered a suitable match for Gustaf-Adolph; without his knowledge, a meeting was arranged with the two sisters.

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Crown Prince Gustaf-Adolph of Sweden and Princess Margaret of Connaught.

Gustaf-Adolph and Margaret fell in love at first sight; he proposed at a dinner held by Lord Cromer at the British Consulate in Egypt and was accepted. Margaret’s parents were very happy with the match. Gustaf-Adolph and Margaret married on June 15, 1905 in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle. The couple spent their honeymoon at Adare Manor in County Limerick, Ireland, and arrived in Sweden on July 8, 1905.

One of Margaret’s wedding presents was the Connaught tiara, which remains in the Swedish royal jewellery collection today.

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Wedding of Princess Margaret and Crown Prince Gustaf-Adolf of Sweden in 1905.

The couple had five children. Margaret was a dedicated mother to her children, and was determined to spend time with them. She was not keen on letting them be raised by nursery staff, as was the convention of the day.

When Gustaf-Adolph’s father, Crown Prince Gustaf, acceded to the throne as King Gustaf V in 1907, the couple became Crown Prince and Princess of Sweden.

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Coronet of Margaret used for the Coronation of Edward VII in 1902.

The marriage between Margaret and Gustaf-Adolph is described as a happy love match. Gustaf Adolf felt great pressure from the “Prussian” military discipline with which he had been raised by his mother, and he was greatly affected by and attracted to Margaret’s differing English customs. The visiting Infanta Eulalia of Spain wrote that the Crown Princess gave the Swedish court “just a touch of the elegance of the Court of St James’s” and of how much Margaret loved her life in Sweden.

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After her arrival in Sweden, Margaret, who in Sweden was called “Margareta“, received lessons in the Swedish language, and asked to be educated in Swedish history and social welfare. After two years, she spoke good Swedish. She was also eager to find out more about Sweden, and on many occasions went on incognito trips.

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Margaret was also interested in art, and was an admirer of the works of Claude Monet. She photographed, painted, and took a great interest in gardening. She and her spouse received Sofiero Palace as a wedding gift, and they spent their summers there and made a great effort creating gardens in an English style on the estate; her children participated in their improvement.

During World War I, Margaret created a sewing society in Sweden to support the Red Cross. The society was called Kronprinsessans Centralförråd för landstormsmäns beklädnad och utrustning (“The Crown Princess’s central storage for clothing and equipment of the home guard”), which was to equip the Swedish armed forces with suitable underwear.

When paraffin supplies ran low she organized a candle collection, and in November 1917 she instituted a scheme to train girls to work on the land. She also acted as intermediary for relatives separated by the war. With her help, private letters and requests to trace men missing in action were passed on. She was also active in her work on behalf of prisoners. She aided prisoners of war in camps around Europe, especially British nationals. Margaret’s efforts during the war were pro-British, in contrast to mother-in-law’s strictly pro-German attitude.

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At 2 o’clock in the morning on Saturday, May 1, 1920, her father’s 70th birthday, Crown Princess Margaret died suddenly in Stockholm of “blood poisoning” (sepsis). Some time before this she had suffered from measles, which aggravated her ear, and she underwent surgery to remove a mastoid. Since the previous Sunday, she had been suffering from pain in her face from something below her eye, and doctors decided to perform another procedure. On Thursday, symptoms of erysipelas appeared under her right ear.

She fell gravely ill on Friday night when symptoms of sepsis became evident, and she died within hours. At the time, she was eight months pregnant with her sixth child. In announcing her death during traditional International Workers’ Day celebrations, Swedish Prime Minister Hjalmar Branting said: “the ray of sunshine at Stockholm Palace has gone out” (Solstrålen på Stockholms slott har slocknat).

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In Britain, there had been reports, vicious rumors, that Margaret was unhappy in Sweden and that her death actually had been a suicide.

Princess Margaret was buried according to her specific and detailed wishes, written in 1914. She asked to be buried in her wedding dress and her veil, with a crucifix in her hands, in a simple coffin made from English oak and covered in British and Swedish flags. She requested that there should be no lying-in-state after her death.

As mentioned her death occurred on her father’s 70th birthday and she died 30 years before her husband’s accession to the throne of Sweden. Through her daughter, Princess Ingrid of Sweden who married King Frederick IX of Denmark Princess Margaret was the Grandmother of the current Queen Margrethe II of Denmark. Queen Margrethe II was named after her grandmother and, like her grandmother, is known as Daisy within the family.

On 3 November 1923 at St. James’s Palace Crown Prince Gustaf-Adolph married Lady Louise Mountbatten, formerly Princess Louise of Battenberg. Her father, Prince Louis of Battenberg, who was an admiral in the British Royal Navy, renounced his German title during the First World War and anglicised his family name to “Mountbatten” at the behest of King George V.

He was then created the first Marquess of Milford Haven in the peerage of the United Kingdom. From 1917, therefore, his daughter was known as “Lady Louise Mountbatten”. Her mother was Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria. Lady Louise was a sister of Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, and of Princess Alice of Battenberg, who was the mother of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. She was also a niece of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia. Lady Louise was also a first cousin once removed from her husband’s first wife, Princess Margaret of Connaught.

May 1, 1850: Birth of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn.

02 Saturday May 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Royal, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Genealogy, Royal Titles, royal wedding, This Day in Royal History

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Duke of Connaught, Governor General of Canada, Louise Margaret of Prussia, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught, Princess Margaret of Connaught, Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, Wilhelm I of Germany, World War I

Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn (Arthur William Patrick Albert; May 1, 1850 – January 16, 1942) was the seventh child and third son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. He served as the Governor General of Canada, the tenth since Canadian Confederation and the only British prince to do so. In 1910 he was appointed Grand Prior of the Order of St John and held this position until 1939.

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Queen Victoria with Prince Arthur

On his mother’s birthday (May, 24) in 1874, Arthur was created a royal peer, being titled as the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and Earl of Sussex. Some years later, Arthur came into the direct line of succession to the Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in the German Empire upon the death in 1899 of his nephew, Prince Alfred of Edinburgh, the only son of his elder brother, Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh. He decided, however, to renounce his own and his son’s succession rights to the duchy, which then passed to his other nephew, Prince Charles Edward, the posthumous son of Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany.

At St. George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle, on March 13, 1879, Arthur married Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia, the daughter of Prince Friedrich-Carl of Prussia and Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt-Dessau. Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia was a great-niece of the German Emperor, Arthur’s godfather, Wilhelm I.

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The couple had three children: Princess Margaret Victoria Charlotte Augusta Norah (born January 15, 1882), Prince Arthur Frederick Patrick Albert (born January 13, 1883), and Princess Victoria Patricia Helena Elizabeth (born March 17, 1886), who were all raised at the Connaughts’ country home, Bagshot Park, in Surrey, and after 1900 at Clarence House, the Connaughts’ London residence. Through his children’s marriages, Arthur became the father-in-law of Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden; Princess Alexandra, Duchess of Fife; and Sir Alexander Ramsay. Arthur’s first two children predeceased him; Margaret while pregnant with his sixth grandchild. For many years, Arthur maintained a liaison with Leonie, Lady Leslie, sister of Jennie Churchill, while still remaining devoted to his wife.

Arthur was educated by private tutors before entering the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich at the age of 16. Upon graduation, he was commissioned as a lieutenant in the British Army, where he served for some 40 years, seeing service in various parts of the British Empire. During this time he was also created a royal duke, becoming the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, as well as the Earl of Sussex.

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It was announced on March 6, 1911 that King George V had, by commission under the royal sign-manual, approved the recommendation of his British prime minister, H.H. Asquith, to appoint Arthur as his representative.His brother-in-law, the Duke of Argyll, had previously served as the country’s governor general, but when Arthur was sworn in on October 13, 1911 in the salon rouge of the parliament buildings of Quebec, he became the first Governor General of Canada who was a member of the British royal family.

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Duke of Connaught later in life with his granddaughter Princess Ingrid of Sweden and her husband, future King Frederick IX of Denmark (parents of current Queen Margarethe II of Denmark).

After the end of his viceregal tenure in 1916, Arthur returned to the United Kingdom and there, as well as in India, performed various royal duties, while also again taking up military duties. Though he retired from public life in 1928, he continued to make his presence known in the army well into the Second World War, before his death in 1942. He was Queen Victoria’s last surviving son.

His eldest daughter, Princess Margaret of Connaught, died on May 1, 1920 her father’s 70th birthday.

The Life of Prince Friedrich Charles of Prussia (1828 – 1885).

10 Tuesday Dec 2019

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Royal, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Genealogy

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Confederation of the Rhine, German Empire, King Frederick William III of Prussia, Louise Margaret of Prussia, Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught, Prince Charles of Prussia, Prince Frederick Charles of Prussia, Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt-Dessau

Prince Friedrich Charles of Prussia (March 20, 1828 – June 15, 1885) was the son of Prince Charles of Prussia (1801–1883) and his wife, Princess Marie of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1808–1877), the eldest daughter of Grand Duke, Charles Friedrich of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach and his wife, Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna, the sister of Emperor Alexander I of Russia. Prince Friedrich Charles was a grandson of King Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia and a nephew of Frederich Wilhelm IV of Prussia and German Emperor Wilhelm I. He was born at Schloss Klein in Berlin.

In 1845, the Prince joined the army and was sent to an infantry company. Roon accompanied the Prince to the University of Bonn in 1846. He was the first Hohenzollern prince to study in a university. He became a member of the Corps Borussia Bonn in 1847 and was awarded Prussia’s Lifesaving Medal for rescuing a child from the Rhine the same year. After his studies, the Prince went back to his regiment in 1848, where he was promoted to captain. His company was issued the breech-loading Dreyse needle gun and the Prince produced an article on its probable future impact, writing that the troops could be prevented from firing off all their ammunition through good training and discipline.

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Prince Friedrich Charles of Prussia

On November 29, 1854 at Dessau he married his second cousin Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt-Dessau (1837–1906), daughter of Leopold IV, Duke of Anhalt and his wife Princess Frederica of Prussia (1796–1850) the youngest child and only daughter of Prince Ludwig Charles of Prussia and his wife Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Princess Frederica’s father was a younger son of Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia. Due to her mother’s later marriages, Frederica would have many half-siblings, including Georg V of Hanover.

They had met at a hunt. Their marriage was unhappy. After the birth of their fourth daughter, Prince Friedrich Charles reportedly beat his wife for not producing a son. According to one source, it was only by the entreaties of Emperor Wilhelm I that a separation never occurred.

Maria Anna was considered by contemporaries to be one of the loveliest women of her generation. She possessed a remarkable talent for music and painting, and often advised young girls when they first entered society.

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Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt-Dessau

They had five children:

1. Princess Marie (1855-1888)
married twice (1) Prince Henry of the Netherlands (1820–1879); (2) Prince Albert of Saxe-Altenburg

2. Princess Elisabeth (1857-1895)
married Friedrich August II, Grand Duke of Oldenburg

3. Princess Anna Victoria (1859-1859)

4. Princess Louise Margarete (1860-1917)
married Prince Arthur of the United Kingdom Duke of Connaught and Strathear

5. Prince Friedrich Leopold (1865-1931)
Married Princess Louise Sophie of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg (younger sister of Augusta Viktoria, wife of German Emperor Wilhelm II).

Prince Friedrich Charles served with distinction in the Austro-Prussian War, where he commanded the First Army; consisting of the II, III and IV corps. Arriving first at Königgrätz, the First Army single-handedly held the numerically superior Austrians at bay for seven hours from 08:00 to 15:00, inflicting such massive casualties on the Austrians that it took the arrival of just one division from his cousin the Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm’s Second Army (future Emperor Friedrich III) to complete the victory and cause the Austrians to order a general withdrawal at 15:00.

At the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, the Prince was given command of the Second Army, and defeated the French Army of the Rhine at the Battle of Mars-la-Tour on August 16, 1870, cutting off its escape route to the west. The battle was followed by another victory at Gravelotte-St.Privat on 18 August and the encirclement and annihilation of the Army of the Rhine at the Siege of Metz. After the fall of Metz on October 27, his army was sent to the Loire to clear the area around Orléans, where French armies, first under Aurelle de Paladines, then under Chanzy, were trying to march north to relieve Paris. He won battles at Orléans on December 2, and Le Mans from January 10-12, 1871. For his services he was promoted to the rank of Generalfeldmarschall. After the war, the Prince was made Inspector-General and was given the rank of Field Marshal of Russia by Alexander II of Russia.

Friedrich Charles died of a heart attack at Jagdschloss Glienicke on June 15, 1885.

The Connaught Family

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by liamfoley63 in Royal Genealogy

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Tags

Alistair Arthur Windsor, Gustaf VI Adolph of Sweden, Louise Margaret of Prussia, Prince Arthur of Connaught, Queen Margrethe II of Denmark., The Duke of Connaught

Looking at the genealogies of the various royal families I have been viewing them in a larger context of a large family often spread out over multiple nation states. I am going to shift my focus for a while and examine the smaller family unit. For example, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert had nine children and each of those children had families of their own so it is these smaller family units I wish to concentrate on. So with these smaller family units I want to just focus on the parents, children and grandchildren.

The first family I wish to look at is the Connaught family.

HRH Prince Arthur William Patrick Albert was born May 1, 1850 and was the seventh child and third son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. As I mentioned in other posts about the Duke of Connaught he was named after his godfather,The Duke of Wellington, the general who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo. Prince Arthur entered military service in the British Army and was to remain in service for 40 years. His mother created him the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and Earl of Sussex. In 1900 when his brother, Prince Alfred, the reigning duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha died and his heir, Hereditary prince Alfred, died the year before, left the Duke of Connaught as heir to the ducal throne. However, Arthur did not want to leave the British Army and uproot his family to take the reigns of government in Coburg so he renounced his rights to the succession for himself and his son, prince Arthur of Connaught. In 1911 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom H. H. Asquith recommended to King George V that he should appoint his uncle to the position of Governor General of Canada replacing Earl Grey. The Duke and Duchess of Connaught served that position until 1916 when they were in turn replaced by the Duke of Devonshire.

The Duke of Connaught’s wife was HHR Princess Luise Margarete Alexandra Victoria Agnes was born at Marmorpalais outside of Potsdam, in the Kingdom of Prussia on July 25, 1860 . Her father was Prince Friedrich-Karl of Prussia (1828–1885), was a nephew of the German Emperor Wilhelm I. Her mother was Princess Maria Anna of Anhalt (1837–1906), daughter of Leopold IV of Anhalt-Dessau.,This made her father a double first cousin of the German Emperor Friedrich III, the husband of her sister-in-law, Victoria, Princess Royal.

On 13 March 1879, Princess Luise Margarete married Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn at St. George’s Chapel Windsor. At first Queen Victoria was not pleased with the match. She did not like the fact that Luise came from her a broken home, her father was physically abusive, and the queen thought she had ugly teeth and mouth along with an unattractive nose. In reality Arthur was her favorite and his mother did not want to part with him. In a short time all of these concerns were forgotten and the queen was calling her daughter-in-law her “dear Louischen.” The couple had a home built at Bagshot Park in Surrey (now the home of the Earl and Countess of Wessex) In 1900 the Duke and Duchess used Clarence House as their London residence which is the current home of the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall.

Between 1882 and 1886 the Duke and Duchess of Connaught had three children. Margaret (1882), Arthur (1883) and Victoria-Patricia (1886). The Duchess of Connaught accompanied her husband on his travels with the army and to Canada for his term as Governor General. From my reading the family seemed very tight and closer than most royal families.

In 1905 Princess Margaret married Prince Gustaf-Adolph of Sweden (he became Crown prince in 1907 on the death of his grandfather King Oscar II). She became a patron of the arts in Sweden and the head of several charities which proved beneficial during World War I. Crown Princess Margaret and Crown Prince Gustaf-Adolph had five children: Gustaf-Adolph (1906-1947), Sigvard (1907-2002), Ingrid (1910-2000), Bertil (1912-1997), Carl-Johan (1916-2012). Crown Princess Margaret is grandmother of the current King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, Queen Margrethe II of Denmark, and of the former Queen-consort of Greece, Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark. On May 1, 1920, her father’s 70th birthday, Crown Princess Margaret died from complications while having mastoid surgery and she was eight months pregnant with her sixth child.

Prince Arthur of Connaught was the first royal prince to be educated at Eton College and he served as Governor-General of the Union of South Africa from 1920 to 1924. Like his father, Prince Arthur also had a career in the British Army and during World War I, Prince Arthur served as aide-de-camp to Generals Sir John French and Sir Douglas Haig. After the war Arthur was promoted to lieutenant colonel and then to full colonel in the Army Reserves. In October 1922, Prince Arthur was promoted to the honorary rank of major general and became an aide-de-camp to his first cousin, King George V. In 1913 Arthur married Princess Alexandra, Duchess of Fife the eldest daughter of Alexander Duff, 1st Duke of Fife and his wife HRH Princess Louise, the Princess Royal, the eldest daughter of King Edward VII.Prince Aurth’s wife was a Duchess in her own right. They had one child who was born HH Prince Alistair Arthuer, Earl of McDuff in 1914. Alistair Arthur was stripped of his style and title when King George V issued new Letters Patent restricting the princely style and title to only the grandchildren of the sovereign in the male line. Unfortunately Alistair Arthur was great-grandson of a sovereign. My personal opinion on this is that since he was the only male great-grandson at the time of the new Letters Patent and he should have been “grandfathered in” and allowed to keep his title.

His father, Prince Arthur of Connaught. died of stomach cancer in 1938 at the age of 55 leaving his son Alistair as heir to his father’s dukedom which he in turn inherited in 1942. Sadly, Alistair only enjoyed his new title for 15 months and he died in 1943. Leaving no heir the dukedom of Connaught merged with the crown.

Princess Victoria-Patrica, or Princess Patricia or Patsy, as she was called, traveled a great deal with her parents and was particularly close with her sister, Margaret. She was made Colonel-in-Chief of Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry in 1918 and remained in that position for life. During the Edwardian era the question who the very attractive Patsy would marry was a eagerly anticipated. She had a number of royal suitors including, Grand Duke Adolph-Friedrich VI of Mecklenburg-Strelitz,, King Alfonso XIII of Spain, future King Manuel II of Portugal and Grand Duke Mikhail of Russia, brother of Czar Nicholas II of Russia. But in the end Patsy chose naval Commander The Hon. Alexander Ramsay. Ramsay later became an Admiral. Patricia voluntarily relinquished her style and title upon her marriage but still remained a member of the British Royal Family. Patricia was also an accomplished artist. She and her husband had one child, Alexander Ramsay of Mar (1919-2000). Patsy died in 1974 at the age of 87 and was one of the last surviving grandchildren of Queen Victoria at the time (the other being princess Alice of Albany, Countess of Athlone who died).

The Duchess of Connaught died in March of 1917 at the age of 56 from influenza and bronchitis and was the first member of the royal family to be cremated. Her husband the Duke of Connaught outlived his wife by 25 years dying at the age of 91 in 1942. The Duke of Connaught was one of the last surviving children of Queen Victoria. 

 

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