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Elizabeth Wellesley, Duchess of Wellington

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Name
  
Elizabeth Duchess


Great-grandparents
  
John Hay

Elizabeth Wellesley, Duchess of Wellington Elizabeth Wellesley Duchess of Wellington Wikipedia


Preceded by
  
Lady Catherine Pakenham

Succeeded by
  
vacant, 3rd Duke of Wellington did not marry title next held by Kathleen Emily Bulkeley-Williams

Born
  
27 September 1820 (
1820-09-27
)

Died
  
August 13, 1904, Walton-on-Thames, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Arthur Wellesley, 2nd Duke of Wellington (m. 1839)

Parents
  
Lady Susan Montagu, George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale

Grandparents
  
George Hay, 7th Marquess of Tweeddale

People also search for
  
George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale

Elizabeth Wellesley, Duchess of Wellington (née Hay; 27 September 1820 – 13 August 1904) was a daughter of the 8th Marquess of Tweeddale. Her husband, Lord Douro, succeeded his father as Duke of Wellington in 1852. She served as Mistress of the Robes to Queen Victoria from 1861 to 1868, and again from 1874 to 1880.

Contents

Early life and family

Lady Elizabeth Hay was born a daughter of George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale. One of her brothers was the ornithologist Viscount Walden, and another the Admiral of the Fleet Lord John Hay.

Marriage

On 18 April 1839 she was married to Lord Douro, eldest son of the famous general and former Tory Prime Minister the first Duke of Wellington. Lord Douro succeeded his father as second Duke of Wellington in 1852.

The Duchess of Wellington was appointed Mistress of the Robes to Queen Victoria in 1861 by the Liberal Prime Minister Lord Palmerston, and continued in that role until 1868, serving through the governments of Lord Russell, Lord Derby and Benjamin Disraeli. She was again Mistress of the Robes in Disraeli's second government, 1874 to 1880.

Her husband died on 13 August 1884, and the Dowager Duchess survived him for exactly twenty years to the day, dying at Burhill Park, Walton-on-Thames on 13 August 1904. They had no children, and the marriage, which had been arranged by their respective families, was not a happy one; historian Norman Gash writes, however, that her father-in-law "found much domestic pleasure" in Elizabeth's company.

The Duchess of Wellington was a Third Class recipient of the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert during Queen Victoria's reign.

References

Elizabeth Wellesley, Duchess of Wellington Wikipedia