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David Mountbatten, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven

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Name
  
David 3rd


David Mountbatten, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven David Mountbatten 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven 12 May 191914

Born
  
David Michael Mountbatten 12 May 1919 Edinburgh, Scotland (
1919-05-12
)

Issue
  
George Mountbatten, 4th Marquess of Milford Haven Lord Ivar Mountbatten

Died
  
April 14, 1970, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Mercedes Bryce (m. 1960), Romaine Pierce (m. 1950)

Children
  
George Mountbatten, 4th Marquess of Milford Haven, Lord Ivar Mountbatten

Parents
  
Nadejda Mountbatten, Marchioness of Milford Haven, George Mountbatten, 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven

Grandsons
  
Henry Mountbatten, Earl of Medina

Similar People
  
George Mountbatten - 4th Marq, George Mountbatten - 2nd Marq, Lord Ivar Mountbatten, Louis Mountbatten - 1st Earl M, Nadejda Mountbatten - Marchion

David Michael Mountbatten, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven, OBE, DSC (12 May 1919 – 14 April 1970), styled Viscount Alderney before 1921 and Earl of Medina between 1921 and 1938, was the son of the 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven and Countess Nadejda de Torby.

Contents

Early years and education

Mountbatten was born in 1919. He was the only son of George Mountbatten and Russian Countess Nadejda (Nada) Torby who wed in 1916. His paternal grandparents were Prince Louis of Battenberg and Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine. Therefore, he was a great-great-grandson of Queen Victoria. His maternal grandparents were Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich Romanov and Sophie of Merenberg. He is also a descendant of the Russian writer Aleksandr Pushkin as well as Peter the Great's African protégé, General Abram Petrovich Gannibal.

He grew up at the family home in Holyport, Berkshire and enjoyed a close friendship with his first cousin Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, later the Duke of Edinburgh. They both attended Dartmouth Naval College. He served as best man to the prince at Prince Philip's marriage in November 1947 to the Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II.

During the Second World War Milford Haven served in the Royal Navy. In 1942 he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for taking the destroyer Kandahar through a minefield in an attempt to rescue the cruiser Neptune. In 1943 he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his work on Malta convoy operations. He retired from the Navy in 1948. He subsequently joined The Castaways' Club, which enabled him to keep in close contact with many of his naval contemporaries.

He then played a prominent part in the London demi-monde of the 1950s, which brought together a colourful mix of aristocrats and shadowy social climbers like osteopath Stephen Ward. This hard-partying set formed the nucleus for the Profumo Affair.

Marriages

Lord Milford Haven was married twice:

  • 1) Romaine Dahlgren Pierce (17 July 1923 – 15 February 1975), daughter of Vinton Ulric Dahlgren Pierce of the United States and his wife, Margaret Knickerbocker Clark, on 4 February 1950 in Washington, D.C.; formerly married on 23 May 1946 to William Simpson, son of a millionaire Chicago department store owner (by whom she had a daughter). They were divorced in 1954 in Mexico. She married, thirdly, to James B. Orthwein. Romaine was the great-granddaughter of the Admiral John A. Dahlgren and the writer Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren. They had no issue.
  • 2) Janet Mercedes Bryce (born Bermuda, 29 September 1937), daughter of Major Francis (Frank) Bryce and Gladys Jean Mosley (whose aunt, Mary Mercedes Bryce, married Colonel Joseph Harold John Phillips, the grandparents of Alexandra Hamilton, Duchess of Abercorn and Natalia Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster) on 17 November 1960 at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Frognal, London. They had two children:
    1. George Mountbatten, 4th Marquess of Milford Haven (born 6 June 1961)
    2. Lord Ivar Mountbatten (born 9 March 1963)

    Death

    David Mountbatten, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven died, aged 50, on 14 April 1970 in London. His ashes were buried in the Battenberg Chapel at St. Mildred's Church, Whippingham, on the Isle of Wight (photo).

    Titles and styles

  • 12 May 1919 - 11 September 1921: Viscount Alderney
  • 11 September 1921 – 8 April 1938: Earl of Medina
  • 8 April 1938 – 14 April 1970: The Most Honourable The Marquess of Milford Haven
  • References

    David Mountbatten, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven Wikipedia