Daughters Irene (1896-1966), Cynthia (1898-1933) and Alexandra (1905-95) were all born before the sad death of his fabulously rich American wife Mary Leiter in 1906. Lord Curzon then embarked on a long love affair with novelist Elinor Glyn, before dropping her to marry his rich, beautiful second wife in 1917.
Anne de Courcy provided insight into girls’ public and private lives, based on their private letters and diaries. For example once their mother died, the girls grew up in the shadow of their loving father who nevertheless left them to a childhood of neglect and nannies. De Courcy’s book, The Viceroy's Daughters (2002), told the story of the Curzon girls who grew up into the last flowering of the privileged world of the British haute monde. Irene's deb party in 1914 included supper for hundreds, tons of exotic flowers and illustrious aristocracy.
As his daughters reached adulthood, Curzon proved autocratic and unreasonable, particularly on the subject of the money their mother had left her daughters in her will, which dad wanted to use to finance his urgent need for house renovation.
This led each of the girls into revolt against their father. Intensely musical and a passionate foxhunter, Irene set up a household of her own at Melton Mowbray in Leicestershire, which by the 1920s had become the hub of a glamorous hunting set whose second sport was late-night bed-hopping. So she was a keen hunter, bridge player, partygoer and drinker, and took a series of lovers that included pianist Arthur Rubinstein. Despite a series of proposals from ambitious suitors, including Nevile Henderson later the British ambassador to Hitler's Berlin, she remained single.
Cynthia married the ambitious Oswald Mosley in 1920, joining him in the Labour Party where she became a popular MP herself. Cynthia was just 21 at marriage and she remained submissively loyal to him despite a] his constant womanising. And b] his alarming political opportunism, veering from young Conservative MP to Labour MP to founder of the British Union of Fascists. In the 1929 general election, Mrs Mosley won an amazing victory as a Labour candidate!! By 1932 Cynthia was enthusiastically extolling the merits of Fascism. How bizarre! Was she so pathetically dependent on Mosley that she would have followed him anywhere? We’ll never know because she died in 1933, at 34, after appendicitis.
Alexandra, the beautiful sister, married the Prince of Wales' friend Edward Fruity Metcalfe in 1925. By the time of Lord Curzon’s death in 1925, he had rebuffed his daughters, the most painful case being with Irene who was refused access to his deathbed. Yet in the 1920s and early 30s, the sisters remained at the centre of Britain’s glittering upper class.
In 1933 youngest sister Alexandra jumped into a long passionate affair with her widower brother-law Mosley and a liaison with Mussolini's ambassador to London, Count Dino Grandi, while simultaneously enjoying a romance with the Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax.
The sisters saw British Fascism from behind the scenes, so they had an intimate view the arrival of Wallis Simpson and the early married life of the Windsors. The war found them based at the Dorchester Hotel, spending their days nursing wounded soldiers, working in canteens, lecturing and doing other war work.
Both sisters became increasingly enmeshed in Mosley's world, Alexandra as his mistress, Irene as the child minder; and they became enthusiastic supporters of his politics. Irene organised a Fascist ball and went to the Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg in 1936! And for a while, “Baba Blackshirt” worked as a go-between for Mosley and her other lover, Mussolini's ambassador Dino Grandi.
Readers of this blog will know my harsh feelings about Oswald Mosley, Wallis Simpson, Edward Duke of Windsor, Nancy Astor and Lord Halifax. Anyone who doubts the awful links between them should read the story of the Duke of Windsor's 1937 trip to Germany.
As war threatened, the sisters retreated from the group. Alexandra's wartime admirers included Averill Harriman and Walter Monckton, the British foreign secretary Lord Halifax, with whom she began a passionate relationship. Irene, anxious about her alcoholism and her spinsterhood, began to be very annoyed with her younger sister, and vice versa. Gossipy yes, but irritating during the real tragedies of WW2.
At the end of their fortunate and unfortunate lives, Irene and Alexandra somehow emerged as pillars of society. Irene made one of the first life peers in 1958 for her work with youth clubs, while Alexandra was recognised for her good work for the Save the Children Fund.
Anne de Courcy's book, 2002.
De Courcy was a keen and experienced writer of upper-class Britain, and The Viceroy's Daughters was indeed a wonderfully revealing portrait of British upper-class life in the early C20th. And although I thought I knew everything about aristocratic British Fascism, the Viceroy's Daughters provided new information about Oswald Mosley, the Cliveden set, Lord Halifax, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor etc - new accounts of the bullying Curzon's career; of the actively nasty but mesmerising Mosley; and of the abdication of the unpleasant Edward VIII. The stories of these men frequently overshadowed the slighter histories of the rich Curzon women.
31 comments:
Boa tarde de sexta-feira-feira e bom final de semana. Obrigado pela visita e comentário. Você sempre nos traz excelentes matérias e temas que eu nunca ouvi falar aqui no Brasil.
Luiz Gomes.
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The stories are so enchanting especially Cynthia. She died at 34! Due to an easily treatable condition in today's world.
Fascinating, Hels. During Curzon's turbulent affair with Elinor Glyn, he installed her at Montacute House in Somerset for 18 months to oversee its redecoration. After a notable scene on a dead tiger in one of her novels, the following rhyming couplet became popular:
Would you like to sin with Elinor Glyn on a tiger skin?
Or would you prefer to err with her on some other fur?
Cynthia married the ambitious Oswald Mosley in 1920, joining him in the Labour Party and becoming a popular MP herself. Cynthia remained submissively loyal to her husband and within just a few years, enthusiastically extolled the merits of Fascism herself. What a strange political path.
Luiz
before De Courcy’s book, I had been familiar only with Lord George Curzon, King Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson, Oswald Mosley and the German authorities. I most certainly knew nothing about Lord Curzon's daughters, aristocratic or otherwise.
Jo-Anne
although some of the details are really upsetting, I would certainly get hold of the book.
Now I will go back and create a link to my old posts on Mosley, but that won't help you with the Curzon women.
roentare
I am sorry for Cynthia because she married Oswald Mosley. He was an extremist, a controlling husband and a leader of de facto anti-fascist demonstrators through ordinary suburbs, terrorising the local workers. But she adored him.... what else could she have done?
I've read a bit about Mosley and while his wife was mentioned in passing as I recall, she was unnamed so it is a surprise to me that she was a daughter of Curzon. The British aristocrats are endlessly interesting and I think I may well drop my habit of reading the equivalent of 'penny dreadfuls' and find this book. Could Curzon's daughters be described as a diminished form of the Mitford Sisters? They do sound so interesting.
Mike
Great British Life talked about all of Curzon's passionate affairs and betrayals of whichever women he had to drop. I wonder if Elinor Glyn moved into Montacute House very cautiously. Working on redecorating the mansion was one thing; being freezing cold in the mansion while her man was seeking his fun elsewhere must have been terrible.
Student
if Mosley really was as controlling as the journal articles suggest, I suppose Cynthia thought she better stand for Parliament for his Labour Party. Luckily she was very successful.
And later when he founded the British Union of Fascists, she joined him and became an enthusiastic supporter of Fascism. I am all in favour of spouses supporting each other, but love shouldn't make their brains rot.
Andrew
British aristocrats were VERY interesting. Look what I wrote in this blog 12 years ago.
Sir Oswald Ernald Mosley, 6th Baronet, of Ancoats' first wife was Lady Cynthia Curzon, daughter of George Lord Curzon of Kedleston, Viceroy of India and then Foreign Secretary. Sir Oswald was himself a Member of Parliament.
After Lady Cynthia died in 1933, Sir Oswald married Lady Diana Mitford Guinness, daughter of David, 2nd Baron Redesdale. They married in Germany in Oct 1936 in Joseph Goebbels' home. Lady Diana Mitford Guinness’ first husband had been Bryan Guinness, 2nd Baron Moyne and heir to the beer fortune.
What I did NOT know what the list of aristocratic supporters closely connected to the British Union of Fascists. THE BUF's major supporter was the newspaper magnate Harold Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere. Lord Rothermere owned the Daily Mirror and the Daily Mail. So many Dukes, Viscounts, Earls and Barons in one place!
It's sad to see people who should know better being led astray or leading others off the path of decency.
Aristocratic or not, daughters and sisters in the same family (here, Curzon family) present us with a rich array of characteristics and relationships. Always interesting to read about it both as facts and gossip stuff.
Cynthia was not very bright but she was caring and her heart was in the right place in believing in what she could do for welfare of the working classes. However she became disillusioned with the Labour Party and Parliament in general, not getting things done in timely fashion, slow, no decisions etc; she regarded speaking in the House as a complete waste of time and reluctantly followed her husband who believed the people could be better served by his New Party which later became the Black Shirts. It does not surprise me her sisters are remembered for good works because underneath it all they were good people.
It's always fascinating to discover new people and their life stories. I haven't heard of these sisters, but it certainly seems like they had quite the life, even if in one case it wasn't very long. Thanks for writing about this book, as I think it sounds like an interesting read. Happy Sunday Hels.
jabblog
I suppose a person or family can hold whatever political views they like, as long as it doesn't damage anyone else's life. But the BUF was created in 1932. Until Mosley was imprisoned in May 1940, the BUF was banned and Mosley moved abroad in 1951, they created havoc for ordinary working families. The party's commitment to Nazi-style antisemitism in 1936 led to increasingly violent riots.
DUTA
Attractive aristocratic daughters were very desirable and felt they didn't need to hide their quality relationships, before during or after their own marriages. They also kept detailed diaries so a lot of their lives were open to public inspection, at least until later on.
Rachel
Lord Curzon dedicated his career to the British nation eg he was Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for India in the early 1890s and Viceroy and Governor-General of India (1899–1905). But in these years he was known for his flogging treatment of Indians. He also angrily attacked Irish home rule.
I am certain his three daughters grew up being fully aware of Lord Curzon's values, even if they never saw his impact abroad. Proud of Britain being the greatest world power, this very conservative politician loved his second wife and hated Russia for threatening Britain's world power. So when Lady Cynthia Curzon wanted to marry Oswald Mosley in 1920, dad was eventually quite pleased. Daughters often relive the life they learned from their father.
YES to the sisters being remembered for their good works, especially during the two world wars.
Erika
reading about aristocratic families in the 1825-1945 era is important, not because they were high status but because they influenced national politics. Of course being rich, good looking, well dressed and sexy counted a bit :)
Hels, I take your point but I believe that they were of their time and class and the bottom line is that the girls were very naive. Lord Curzon was against his daughter marrying Mosley but could not find a reason to stop her in that Mosley was clearly going to be able to support her and that was the main priority at the time so he allowed them to go ahead and marry. He was later greatly troubled by them.
Rachel
The first Lady Curzon died as soon as she gave birth to her third daughter. And Lord Curzon died just a couple of years after his daughter married Mosley, so had something gone badly, he would never have known. And he knew nothing about Alexandra who started a long passionate affair with her widower brother-law Mosley in 1933 and a liaison with Mussolini's ambassador to London, Count Dino Grandi. It was a mess.
It must have been sooner rather than later then that he was troubled! He was certainly troubled by the switch from the Conservative Party to the Labour Party! I agree it was a mess.
I find it interesting to look at this period and what people were thinking and doing and our present times when we are watching the most venal behavior in some in the political classes all over the world , but particularly in the US . Margery Taylor Green would have been a keen supporter of Mosley and I think a lot of the general population of the world would have supported many of his ideas . What revolts people about Hitler is his murderous holocaust but many of his ideas are still appealing to many, they just don't see the slippery slope they are on.
Rachel
thanks for your comments. Read De Courcy’s book, The Viceroy's Daughters, and let me know what you think of it.
mem
because ugly, violent and racist behaviours existed _before_ Mosley or Hitler were adults, it was inevitable that an increasing percentage of the inter-war populations would have supported many of their ideas. What is more shocking, as you note, is that these ideas are still appealing to many today, without apology.
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Timothee,
welcome to the blog. Which areas of art, architecture and history interest you most?
The way you weave together historical facts and anecdotes is commendable, and I found myself immersed in their world throughout the read!
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Whitney, Barbara and Ashlee,
many thanks. Have you read de Courcy's book?
Fascinating insights into the lives of Lord Curzon's daughters in India! Their elegance and style are reminiscent of carefully chosen decor items that could benefit from a "preschoolsmiles promo code" to add a touch of sophistication to any home. Thanks for this captivating blog!
Jennifer
The upper class lived a very elegant life in India, didn't they, but I originally knew nothing about Lord Curzon's aristocratic daughters specifically. So reading De Courcy’s book, The Viceroy's Daughters, was a real eye opener.
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