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Carole Middleton
Carole Middleton
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Carole Elizabeth Middleton (née Goldsmith; born 31 January 1955)[1] is an English businesswoman. She is the mother of Catherine, Princess of Wales, Philippa Matthews, and James Middleton.

Key Information

Born in Perivale and brought up in Southall, London, Middleton was educated at Featherstone High School before working as a secretary. She joined British Airways and worked as a flight attendant until her marriage to Michael Middleton, a member of the Middleton family.

Middleton founded Party Pieces, a mail-order party-supply company, in 1987. Her first three grandchildren, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, are second, third, and fourth in line to the British throne, respectively. The Middleton family resides at Bucklebury Manor, in Berkshire.

Family background and early life

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Carole Elizabeth Goldsmith was born on 31 January 1955 in Perivale, London, the daughter of Ronald (1931–2003) and Dorothy Goldsmith (née Harrison; 1935–2006), great-granddaughter of Jane Harrison (née Liddle; c.1839–1881) whose great-great-grandfather was aristocrat Sir Thomas Conyers, 9th Baronet.[2][3][4][5]

Her father was a craftsman decorator, while her mother worked as a part-time sales assistant in a jewellery shop.[6] She spent her early years in council housing in Ealing before moving to a small home in Southall, west London, attending the local high school. She is the older sister of IT recruitment multi-millionaire businessman Gary Goldsmith.[7][8][9]

She initially left school aged 16, but soon returned and achieved four A-levels.[10] She originally planned on being a teacher, but has stated that "my parents couldn't afford to send me to teacher training college". She subsequently worked as a shop assistant for John Lewis before being hired as a secretary for British Airways.[10] She then transferred to ground crew and by her marriage in 1980 was working as a flight attendant.[10][11]

Career

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In 1987, Middleton established Party Pieces, a company that began by making party bags and which then sold party supplies and decorations by mail order. Middleton first began the business "at her kitchen table" and distributed thousands of leaflets to advertise locally.[12] Her husband quit his job at British Airways to join her at the company in 1989.[13] In 1995, the firm's growth necessitated its headquarters be moved to a range of farm buildings at Ashampstead Common.[14][15] Party Pieces was sold in May 2023 after it fell into administration.[16] The company owed £2.6 million to creditors when it collapsed, including £612,685 owed to HM Revenue and Customs, £218,749 owed to Royal Bank of Scotland for a Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan, and £20,430 to an Afghan refugee whose small business was a supplier of helium gas.[17][18][19] The company's administrator's report stated that unsecured creditors were unlikely to be paid.[20]

Personal life

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Goldsmith married colleague flight dispatcher Michael Middleton on 21 June 1980 at the Church of St James in Dorney, Buckinghamshire.[21] Her husband descended from a prominent Yorkshire family with aristocratic roots; his grandmother Olive Middleton was a V.A.D. nurse alongside her second cousin Florence, Baroness Airedale.[22][23][10] The couple subsequently bought a Victorian house in Bradfield Southend near Reading, Berkshire.[21] The Middletons had three children: Catherine (b. 9 January 1982), Philippa (b. 6 September 1983) and James (b. 15 April 1987).[21] The family moved to Jordan in 1984 before returning to West Berkshire, Bradfield Southend, in 1986.[24] In 1995, the Middletons purchased Oak Acre, a Tudor-style manor house in Bucklebury, Berkshire.[25] In 2002, Middleton and her husband bought "with cash" a flat in Chelsea, London, in which their children lived after completing their university studies.[26] The flat was sold for £1.88 million in 2019.[27]

In 2011, her daughter Catherine married Prince William at Westminster Abbey.[28] The gold chevron on the coat of arms commissioned by her husband that year is in reference to Middleton's maiden name of Goldsmith.[29] She has seven grandchildren: Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis of Wales, Arthur Michael, Grace Elizabeth Jane and Rose Matthews, as well as James's son, Inigo.[30] In 2012, the family bought Bucklebury Manor, in Bucklebury, West Berkshire – a Grade II listed Georgian manor house set on more than 18 acres.[31]

The Middleton family's wealth is the result of their business combined with the trust funds inherited from Olive Christiana Middleton (née Lupton), whom the BBC reported in 2011 as being Michael Middleton's aristocrat grandmother.[32] This wealth has resulted in the Middletons being reported to be multi-millionaires.[33][34][35]

Support for family

[edit]

In 2024, Middleton played a significant role in supporting her daughter Catherine, Princess of Wales, during her cancer diagnosis and treatment. She was photographed driving Catherine in Windsor in February 2024, marking Catherine's first public sighting after abdominal surgery in January. On 9 September 2024, Middleton appeared in a Kensington Palace video alongside her husband Michael, Catherine, Prince William, and their three children, playing cards, as Catherine announced she had completed chemotherapy. The Middleton family's closeness was further highlighted by James Middleton's Instagram post, stating, "Over the years, we have climbed many mountains together. As a family, we will climb this one with you too."[36]

References

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from Grokipedia
![Carole Elizabeth Middleton on the balcony of Buckingham Palace][float-right] Carole Elizabeth Middleton (née Goldsmith; born 31 January 1955) is a British businesswoman recognized primarily as the mother of . Born in , , to and Dorothy Goldsmith, she worked as a for , where she met her husband, Michael Middleton, a ; the couple married on 21 1980. They have three children: (born 1982), Philippa (born 1983), and James (born 1987). In 1987, Middleton founded Party Pieces, a mail-order party supplies company, after struggling to source suitable items for her daughter's birthday, growing it into a multimillion-pound enterprise with her husband and later expanding internationally. The family's prominence rose following Catherine's marriage to Prince William in 2011, positioning Middleton as a key maternal figure in the , with her grandchildren—including Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis—in direct line to the throne.

Early Life and Background

Family Origins

Carole Elizabeth Goldsmith, later Middleton, was born on 31 January 1955 in , , to Ronald John James Goldsmith (1931–2003) and Dorothy Anne Goldsmith (née Harrison; 1935–2006). Ronald Goldsmith, born in Hayes, , came from a modest working-class background; his father, Stephen Charles Goldsmith, had worked in , and the family resided in a small in after economic hardships following the death of Ronald's paternal grandfather, Charlie Goldsmith. Ronald himself pursued a career in , initially in before transitioning to self-employment as a builder, painter, and decorator, reflecting the labor-intensive trades common in his family's lineage, which traced back to coal miners in . Dorothy Harrison was born in , , to working-class parents, and moved to in her youth, where she met ; she worked variously as a shop clerk and in a jewelry , contributing to the family's upward mobility from post-war austerity. Her maternal lineage included rural roots, with her mother, Elizabeth Temple, originating from a farming background in the North East. The Goldsmiths' household in emphasized and , with and Dorothy raising Carole and her brother Gary in a semi-detached home purchased through savings and ventures, emblematic of mid-20th-century British aspirational working-class progress.

Childhood and Education

Carole Elizabeth Goldsmith was born on 31 January 1955 at Maternity Hospital in , (now part of ). She was the daughter of Ronald Goldsmith, a self-employed builder and decorator, and Dorothy Harrison, a typist who later worked in secretarial roles. Her family background was working-class, with roots in modest circumstances; her parents had met during , and Ronald Goldsmith operated a small painting and decorating business after serving in the Royal Air Force. Goldsmith grew up in the London suburbs of and , areas characterized by post-war housing estates and council accommodations typical of mid-20th-century working-class life. Her early childhood reflected limited financial resources, with the family relying on her father's trade work amid economic constraints of the era, though no records indicate extreme hardship. For her education, Goldsmith attended local state schools, including Featherstone High School (now Featherstone High School in ), a comprehensive where she studied until age 16 in 1971. Upon leaving school, she entered the directly, taking a position as a at the Prudential Assurance , forgoing further formal such as attendance. This path aligned with common trajectories for many from similar socioeconomic backgrounds in 1970s Britain, prioritizing early employment over extended studies.

Marriage and Family

Relationship with Michael Middleton

Carole Middleton met in the late while both were employed by ; she worked as a , and he served as a . The couple married on June 21, 1980, in a low-key ceremony at St. James's Church in Dorney, . Following their marriage, they welcomed three children: Catherine on January 9, 1982; in 1983; and James in 1987. Michael supported Carole's entrepreneurial efforts by joining Party Pieces as a director in 1989, contributing to the family's operations alongside their parental roles. Their partnership has endured for over four decades, marked by joint public appearances and mutual involvement in , including support during their children's milestones.

Children and Family Dynamics

Carole and Michael Middleton have three children: Catherine Elizabeth Middleton, born January 9, 1982, in ; Philippa Charlotte Middleton, born September 6, 1983, in Reading; and James William Middleton, born April 15, 1987, in Reading. The family lived in , , after moving from , where the children were raised in a stable, upper-middle-class environment supported by Carole's Party Pieces business, though without overt displays of wealth to instill self-reliance. Carole employed an authoritative style, characterized by firm boundaries combined with emotional support, requiring her children to join meals with adult portions rather than separate children's food, which promoted equality and discouraged picky eating habits. This approach extended to mandatory household chores for Catherine, , and James, such as setting the table and clearing dishes during dinners, to cultivate responsibility and normalcy amid growing success. She encouraged an ethos of ambition and capability, reportedly telling her children they could "do anything," while emphasizing hard work through involvement in the business from a young age. The siblings maintained tight-knit bonds, with Philippa serving as Catherine's maid of honor at her 2011 wedding and James delivering a speech highlighting unity; Carole fostered this through regular outdoor activities and collective holidays, avoiding overindulgence to prioritize relational closeness over material excess. Despite external perceptions of social ambition post-Catherine's royal marriage, internal dynamics centered on mutual support, as evidenced by the children's defense of their parents during business challenges and Carole's ongoing role as a stabilizing maternal figure.

Entrepreneurial Career

Founding and Early Success of Party Pieces

Carole Middleton established Party Pieces in 1987 as a mail-order specializing in supplies and decorations, prompted by her frustration in sourcing suitable items for her daughter Catherine's fifth birthday , limited primarily to clown-themed plates. Initially focused on producing party bags, the venture began modestly from the family home in , with Middleton and her husband Michael handling all operations, including order fulfillment, packaging, and product creation. The business gained early traction through catalog-based sales, capitalizing on demand for themed children's party goods in an era before widespread online retail. By leveraging personal networks and word-of-mouth, Party Pieces expanded its product range to include invitations, costumes, and personalized items, achieving steady growth that contributed to the family's financial independence. This period marked the company's foundation as a family-oriented enterprise, with Middleton's children later assisting in aspects like content creation, though core early development relied on the parents' direct involvement.

Expansion and Challenges

Party Pieces experienced steady growth following its establishment in 1987, initially operating from Carole Middleton's kitchen table as a mail-order catalog focused on affordable children's party supplies, inspired by difficulties sourcing suitable items for her daughter Catherine's fifth birthday. The business expanded its product range beyond children's events to encompass weddings and other celebrations, relocating from small office units to a converted barn as operations scaled. By the early , it had achieved annual turnovers of £3-5 million with profits around £1 million, supported by the development of eight own-brand collections, including eco-friendly lines tied to initiatives. In 2022, the company pursued international expansion by entering the U.S. market through a retail partnership with Saker ShopRites in , marking its first venture outside the and signaling broader wholesale ambitions. This move coincided with an 18 percent rise in retail sales in the preceding year, reflecting efforts to capitalize on brand recognition amid visibility. However, expansion efforts encountered significant hurdles, including intense market competition requiring constant adaptation to trends, affordability, and sustainability demands. The COVID-19 pandemic severely disrupted operations starting in 2020, with lockdowns causing logistical issues, product shortages, and a £1 million loss as party-related demand evaporated. Sales continued to decline into 2021, resulting in losses exceeding £250,000, though Middleton noted some resilience through customers' innovative at-home celebrations. By late 2022, the cost-of-living crisis exacerbated challenges, leading to reduced consumer spending and what Middleton described as a "terrible Christmas" period. Ambitious pushes like U.S. entry strained resources further, compounding pandemic recovery difficulties without immediate offsetting gains. Middleton also highlighted personal strains, such as balancing entrepreneurship with motherhood through rigid organization, underscoring operational complexities in a family-run enterprise.

Business Decline and Aftermath

Party Pieces began experiencing significant financial difficulties following the , recording a post-tax loss of £285,990 in 2021 on revenues of £4.5 million, attributed to reduced demand for party supplies amid lockdowns. By the year ending March 2022, revenues had fallen to £3.2 million, with a pre-tax net loss of £900,000, exacerbating pressures despite attempts to restructure. These mounting losses culminated in the company entering administration on May 17, 2023, with unsecured debts totaling approximately £2.6 million, including £612,952 owed to for VAT, £84,690 to 27 employees for unpaid wages and holiday pay, and over £1 million to trade suppliers. Administrators from FRP Advisory noted that Party Pieces had faced "challenging trading conditions" but highlighted prior warnings to management about unsustainable cash flow, which creditors later cited as evidence of inadequate oversight leading to the collapse. The administration process revealed that the business had continued operations despite risks, prompting accusations from affected suppliers of "" after they had been assured of stability. Upon administration, the company's assets were sold for an undisclosed sum to entrepreneur James Sinclair's Teddy Tastic Bear Company (trading as The Partyman Group), a pre-pack deal intended to preserve some jobs and the brand, though it failed to cover the full claims, leaving a shortfall of £2.6 million. Sinclair, who assumed control without injecting funds to settle prior debts, attributed the decline partly to outdated models and over-reliance on without sufficient to post-pandemic shifts, while defending the Middletons' entrepreneurial legacy. In the aftermath, Party Pieces entered proceedings in early 2024, with Carole and personally liable for approximately £320,000 in unpaid practitioner fees, compounding the family's financial strain amid reports of Carole's emotional distress over the venture's failure, which she described as a source of deep upset. The collapse drew scrutiny to management decisions, including a and expansion that strained resources without yielding proportional returns, ultimately dissolving a once valued at around £30 million and highlighting vulnerabilities in family-run enterprises during economic disruptions. No filings occurred, but the episode underscored ongoing creditor losses and the Middletons' efforts to shield family members, including , from reputational fallout.

Public Involvement and Royal Ties

Entry into Public Eye via Daughter's Marriage

The engagement of Catherine Middleton to Prince William, announced by Clarence House on November 16, 2010, markedly increased media scrutiny of the Middleton family, thrusting Carole Middleton into broader public view as the bride's mother. While the couple's relationship, which began at the University of St Andrews around 2001, had already drawn attention to Kate since the mid-2000s, the formal engagement announcement shifted focus to the family's background, business ventures, and Carole's role in raising the future Princess of Wales. The royal wedding on April 29, 2011, at Westminster Abbey solidified Carole's prominence in the public eye, with her attending the ceremony in a sky-blue ensemble designed by Jane Corbett and participating in the procession to Buckingham Palace. As mother of the bride, Carole accompanied her husband Michael during key moments, including the balcony appearance where the newlyweds greeted crowds amid the traditional RAF flypast, an event broadcast worldwide and viewed by an estimated two billion people. This exposure marked a transition for Carole from relative obscurity as a party supplies entrepreneur to a figure of ongoing royal-adjacent interest, though she later expressed discomfort with the accompanying press intrusion that began intensifying during the courtship.

Ongoing Support for Royal Family

Carole Middleton has maintained a visible and practical role in supporting Catherine, Princess of Wales, and the broader royal family following her daughter's 2011 marriage to Prince William. This includes hands-on assistance during family health crises, such as Catherine's abdominal surgery in January 2024 and subsequent cancer diagnosis announced on March 22, 2024, where Middleton helped manage childcare for Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, including school runs to provide stability amid public scrutiny. During Catherine's chemotherapy, which concluded by September 2024, Middleton served as a primary caregiver, described by insiders as the "chief nurse" at the family home in Bucklebury, Berkshire, where Catherine recovered post-treatment, with Michael Middleton aiding in child supervision. On September 9, 2024, Middleton appeared alongside Michael, Catherine, William, and the children in a Kensington Palace video marking the end of Catherine's preventive chemotherapy, emphasizing family unity. Middleton has also attended key royal engagements, reinforcing familial ties. She joined the family at Catherine's "Together at Christmas" carol concert on December 6, 2024, at , offering public solidarity after a challenging year. In June 2025, she attended Royal Ascot's second day, interacting warmly with despite Catherine's last-minute absence due to ongoing recovery. Additionally, in July 2025, Middleton and Michael were in the royal box at Wimbledon, greeting extended royal associates, underscoring her integration into royal social circles. Observers have noted Middleton's enduring emotional influence, positioning her as a stabilizing "second mum" to , fostering his personal growth while providing consistent physical presence for Catherine's public duties resumption in 2025. This support extends to private counsel, with Middleton credited for helping navigate royal protocols and family dynamics post-marriage.

Controversies and Criticisms

Accusations of Ambition and Social Climbing

Carole Middleton has been accused by various media reports and anonymous sources of exhibiting excessive ambition and social climbing, particularly through efforts to elevate her family's status via her daughter Catherine's relationship with Prince William. These criticisms often portray Middleton as a calculated figure who orchestrated opportunities for her children to mingle with , such as enrolling them in elite institutions like , which reportedly cost around £16,000 annually per pupil in the early 2000s, funded by the family's Party Pieces business. Such actions were framed by detractors as deliberate social maneuvering rather than standard parental investment in education. Specific allegations include claims from Middleton's former goddaughter, Jessica Hayllar, who in 2014 described her as a "snobbish social climber" who had distanced herself from lower-status contacts after her daughter's royal marriage, stating, "She behaves as if we are not good enough for her now." Neighbors in the family's village of around 2007 reportedly labeled the Middletons "ghastly" social climbers, with some attributing Carole's perceived pushiness to her background as a former . British tabloids amplified these narratives, dubbing her "doors to manual" in reference to her working-class roots and alleged affectation of upper-class manners, a phrase that gained traction during wedding coverage in . These accusations peaked amid scrutiny of the Middletons' rapid ascent, with outlets like the Daily Mail questioning if Carole was "too pushy for the royals" and implying she engineered Catherine's university placement at St Andrews to intersect with William's path. Reports from the time also cited palace insiders claiming Queen Elizabeth II viewed Carole as "not right or acceptable" due to her perceived lack of breeding, though such accounts remain anecdotal and unconfirmed by official channels. Critics within aristocratic circles dismissed the family's pre-royal lifestyle—living in a converted barn and operating a mail-order business—as incompatible with royal standards, fueling perceptions of opportunistic ambition over genuine merit. Despite this, no empirical evidence of unethical conduct has surfaced, and the claims largely reflect class-based snobbery against middle-class upward mobility.

Business Management and Employee Relations

In March 2019, Party Pieces, under Carole Middleton's management, reduced its workforce by approximately half, with three employees made redundant and a fourth placed at risk of redundancy, amid reported financial pressures and concerns about the company's viability. These layoffs occurred as the business faced challenges from declining sales, prompting cost-cutting measures. Former employees have criticized Middleton's management style as demanding and micromanaging, with accounts of her sending up to 71 emails in a single day to staff, creating a high-pressure environment. Additional complaints included docking pay for minor absences such as dental appointments and shunning employees who expressed disagreement with her decisions, leading to perceptions of her as rude and terrorizing. These reports, primarily from anonymous sources cited in tabloid coverage, highlight tensions in employee relations during a period when Middleton was actively involved in daily operations before stepping back in 2019 to focus on family. Such practices contributed to low morale, with staff feeling overburdened and undervalued, exacerbating operational challenges as the company navigated economic headwinds. While Party Pieces had previously enjoyed growth, these internal issues were cited as factors in its struggles, though Middleton has not publicly responded to the specific allegations.

Media Depictions and Responses

Media outlets have often portrayed Carole Middleton as a determined entrepreneur and supportive mother whose and family ambitions intersected with royal scrutiny following her daughter Catherine's 2011 marriage to Prince William. British tabloids, including the , have depicted her as akin to reality television figures like , emphasizing her promotional efforts for Party Pieces amid heightened public interest in the Middletons. This coverage intensified after the company's 2023 collapse, with reports highlighting £2.4 million in debts and creditor frustrations over perceived inadequate responses from Middleton during administration proceedings. A prominent fictionalized depiction occurred in Netflix's season six, premiered on December 14, 2023, where actress portrayed Middleton as manipulatively engineering Catherine's relationship with , including staging encounters at the . The series suggested Middleton orchestrated events like a low-cost flight to prompt William's interest, framing her as a calculating social climber from modest origins. This narrative drew criticism for classist and misogynistic undertones, with observers noting disproportionate focus on Middleton's agency over her husband Michael's role. Responses to these depictions have included familial rebuttals; in January 2024, Catherine's uncle Gary Goldsmith condemned the Crown portrayal as depicting Middleton as an "evil person" scheming entry into the royal family, questioning its accuracy and suggesting legal action. Middleton herself acknowledged the toll of press intrusion in a 2017 interview, stating it strained family privacy despite their efforts at discretion. In 2021, she withdrew from Party Pieces publicity amid Prince Philip's hospitalization to avoid insensitivity, reflecting awareness of media optics tied to royal associations. Broader commentary has highlighted how such portrayals often amplify unverified ambitions while overlooking empirical successes, like Party Pieces' growth from a mail-order startup to multimillion-pound revenue before external pressures like the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to its decline.

References

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