Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon
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Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon (Margaret Rose; 21 August 1930 – 9 February 2002), was the younger daughter of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. She was the younger sister and only sibling of Queen Elizabeth II.
Key Information
Margaret was born when her parents were the Duke and Duchess of York, and she spent much of her childhood with them and her elder sister. Her life changed at the age of six, when her father succeeded to the British throne following the abdication of his brother Edward VIII. Margaret's sister became heir presumptive, with Margaret second in line to the throne. Her position in the line of succession diminished over the following decades as Elizabeth's children and grandchildren were born. During the Second World War, the two sisters stayed at Windsor Castle despite suggestions to evacuate them to Canada. During the war years, Margaret was too young to perform official duties and continued her education, being nine years old when the war broke out and turning fifteen just after hostilities ended.
From the 1950s onwards, Margaret became one of the world's most celebrated socialites, famed for her glamorous lifestyle and reputed romances. Most famously, she fell in love in the early 1950s with Peter Townsend, a married RAF officer in the royal household. In 1952, her father died, her sister became queen, and Townsend divorced his wife. He proposed to Margaret early in the following year. Many in the government believed that he would be an unsuitable husband for the Queen's 22-year-old sister, and the Archbishop of Canterbury refused to countenance her marriage to a divorced man.[1] Margaret abandoned her plans with Townsend. In 1960, she married Antony Armstrong-Jones, whom Elizabeth created Earl of Snowdon. The couple had two children, David and Sarah. Margaret's marriage to Lord Snowdon became strained, with both of them engaging in extramarital affairs. They separated in 1976 and divorced in 1978. Margaret did not remarry.
Margaret was a controversial member of the British royal family. Her divorce received much negative publicity, and her private life was for many years the subject of speculation by media and royal correspondents. Her health deteriorated in the last twenty years of her life. She was a heavy smoker for most of her adult life, and had a lung operation in 1985 and a bout of pneumonia in 1993, as well as three strokes between 1998 and 2001. Margaret died in 2002 aged 71, after suffering her fourth stroke.
Early life
[edit]Margaret was born at 9:22 pm on 21 August 1930 at Glamis Castle in Scotland,[2] her mother's ancestral home,[3] and was affectionately known within the royal family as Margot.[4] She was the first member of the royal family in direct line of succession to be born in Scotland since the 1600s.[5] She was delivered by Sir Henry Simson, the royal obstetrician.[6] The Home Secretary, J. R. Clynes, was present to verify the birth. The registration of her birth was delayed for several days to avoid her being numbered thirteen in the parish register.[7] Margaret was baptised in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace on 30 October 1930 by Cosmo Lang, the Archbishop of Canterbury.[9]
At the time of her birth, Margaret was fourth in the line of succession to the British throne. She was the younger daughter of Prince Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI), and Elizabeth, Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother). Her father was the second son of King George V and Queen Mary, and her mother was the youngest daughter of Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, and Cecilia Bowes-Lyon, Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne. The Duchess of York originally wanted to name her second daughter Ann Margaret, as she explained to Queen Mary in a letter: "I am very anxious to call her Ann Margaret, as I think Ann of York sounds pretty, & Elizabeth and Ann go so well together."[10] George V disliked the name Ann but approved of the alternative, Margaret Rose.[11]
Margaret's early life was spent primarily at the Yorks' residences at 145 Piccadilly (their town house in London) and Royal Lodge in Windsor.[12] The Yorks were perceived by the public as an ideal family,[13] but unfounded rumours that Margaret was deaf and mute were not completely dispelled until her first main public appearance at her uncle Prince George's wedding in 1934.[14]

Margaret was educated alongside her sister, Elizabeth, by their Scottish governess, Marion Crawford. Margaret's education was mainly supervised by her mother, who in the words of Randolph Churchill "never aimed at bringing her daughters up to be more than nicely behaved young ladies".[15] When Queen Mary insisted upon the importance of education, the Duchess of York commented, "I don't know what she meant. After all I and my sisters only had governesses and we all married well — one of us very well".[16] Margaret was resentful about her limited education, especially in later years, and aimed criticism at her mother.[16] However, Margaret's mother told a friend that she "regretted" that her daughters did not go to school like other children,[17] and the employment of a governess rather than sending the girls to school may have been done only at the insistence of their grandfather George V.[18] J. M. Barrie, author of Peter Pan, read stories to the sisters as children.[19]
Margaret's grandfather died in January 1936, and her uncle acceded to the throne as Edward VIII. Less than a year later, in December 1936, Edward abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson, a twice-divorced American, whom neither the Church of England nor the Dominion governments would accept as queen. The Church did not recognise the marriage of a divorced woman with a living ex-husband as valid. Edward's abdication made Margaret's father reluctantly assume the throne, and Margaret became second in line to the throne, with the title The Princess Margaret to indicate her status as a child of the sovereign.[20] The family moved into Buckingham Palace; Margaret's room overlooked The Mall.[21]

Margaret was a Brownie in the 1st Buckingham Palace Brownie Pack, formed in 1937. She was also a Girl Guide and later a Sea Ranger. She served as President of Girlguiding UK from 1965 until her death on 9 February 2002.[22][23]
At the outbreak of World War II, Princesses Margaret and Elizabeth were at Birkhall, on the Balmoral Castle estate, where they stayed until Christmas 1939, enduring nights so cold that drinking water in carafes by their bedside froze.[24] They spent Christmas at Sandringham House before moving to Windsor Castle, just outside London, for much of the remainder of the war.[25] Lord Hailsham wrote to Winston Churchill to advise the evacuation of the princesses to the greater safety of Canada,[26] to which their mother famously replied, "The children won't go without me. I won't leave without the King. And the King will never leave."[27] At Windsor, the princesses staged pantomimes at Christmas in aid of the Queen's Wool Fund, which bought yarn to knit into military garments.[28] In 1940, Margaret sat next to Elizabeth during their radio broadcast for the BBC's Children's Hour, addressing other children who had been evacuated from cities.[29] Margaret spoke at the end by wishing all the children goodnight.[29]

Unlike other members of the royal family, Margaret was not expected to undertake any public or official duties during the war. She developed her skills at singing and playing the piano,[30] often show tunes from stage musicals.[31] Her contemporaries thought she was spoiled by her parents, especially her father,[32] who allowed her to take liberties not usually permissible, such as being allowed to stay up to dinner at the age of thirteen.[16]
Crawford despaired at the attention Margaret received, writing to friends: "Could you this year only ask Princess Elizabeth to your party? ... Princess Margaret does draw all the attention and Princess Elizabeth lets her do that." Elizabeth, however, did not mind this, and commented, "Oh, it's so much easier when Margaret's there—everybody laughs at what Margaret says".[16] Their father described Elizabeth as his pride and Margaret as his joy.[33] When Elizabeth joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service in 1945, Margaret became extremely jealous, lamenting, "I was born too late!" as she was too young to join herself.[34]
Post-war years
[edit]
At the end of the war in 1945, Margaret appeared on the balcony at Buckingham Palace with her family and Winston Churchill. Afterwards, both Elizabeth and Margaret joined the crowds outside the palace, incognito, chanting, "We want the King, we want the Queen!"[35] They both joined the festivities with their fellow British citizens, such as dancing the "hokey cokey", "Lambeth Walk" and conga. "I remember lines of unknown people linking arms and walking down Whitehall, and all of us were swept along by tides of happiness and relief," Elizabeth later recalled.[36] Margaret and Elizabeth were "terrified" of being recognised, so they did their best to stay hidden in plain sight.[37]
On 15 April 1946, Margaret was confirmed into the Church of England.[38] On 1 February 1947, she, Elizabeth and their parents embarked on a state tour of Southern Africa. The three-month-long visit was Margaret's first visit abroad. She later claimed that she remembered "every minute of it",[39] including rides on horseback taken by her and Elizabeth using horses lent by locals near the royal train. Her chaperon on those occasions was Peter Townsend, the King's equerry,[40] who it was noticed could be quite sharp with Margaret.[41] In November 1947, Margaret was a bridesmaid at the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten. In the next three years, Elizabeth and Philip had two children, Prince Charles and Princess Anne, whose births moved Margaret further down the line of succession.[42]
In 1950, the former royal governess, Marion Crawford, published an unauthorised biography of Elizabeth's and Margaret's childhood years, titled The Little Princesses, in which she described Margaret's "light-hearted fun and frolics"[43] and her "amusing and outrageous ... antics".[44]
The Margaret Set
[edit]Around the time of Elizabeth's wedding, the press started to follow the social life of "unconventional" Margaret and her reputation for vivacity and wit.[45] A young woman with "vivid blue eyes",[46] Margaret enjoyed socialising with high society and young aristocrats, including Sharman Douglas, the daughter of the American ambassador, Lewis Williams Douglas.[47] A celebrated beauty known for her glamour and fashion sense, Margaret was often featured in the press at balls, parties, and nightclubs[48] with friends who became known as the Margaret Set.[49] The number of her official engagements increased (they included a tour of Italy, Switzerland, and France), and she joined a growing number of charitable organisations as president or patron.[50]

Favoured haunts of the Margaret Set were The 400 Club, the Café de Paris and the Mirabelle restaurant.[51] Anticipation of an engagement or romance between Margaret and a member of her set were often reported. In 1948, international news grew that her engagement to the Marquess of Blandford would be announced on her 18th birthday.[52] Similar speculation moved to the Hon. Peter Ward, then Billy Wallace and others. The set also mixed with celebrities, including Danny Kaye, whom she met after watching him perform at the London Palladium in February 1948.[53] He was soon accepted by the royal social circle.[54] In July 1949, at a fancy dress ball at the US ambassador's residence, Margaret performed the can-can on stage, accompanied by Douglas and ten other costumed girls. A press frenzy ensued, with Kaye denying he had taught Margaret the dance.[55] Press interest could be intrusive. During a private visit to Paris in 1951, Margaret and Prince Nicholas of Yugoslavia were followed into a nightclub by a paparazzo who took photographs of them until British detectives physically removed him from the club.[56]
In 1952, although Margaret attended parties and debutante balls with friends such as Douglas and Mark Bonham Carter, the set were seen infrequently together.[57] They regrouped in time for Coronation season social functions. In May 1953, Margaret met singer Eddie Fisher when he performed at the Red, White and Blue Ball. She asked him to her table and he was "invited to all sorts of parties".[58] Margaret fell out with him in 1957, but years later, Fisher still claimed the night he was introduced to her was the greatest thrill of his lifetime.[59] In June 1954, the Set performed the Edgar Wallace play The Frog at the Scala Theatre. It was organised by Margaret's close friend Judy Montagu with Margaret as assistant director. It drew praise for raising £10,500 for charity, but criticism for incompetent performances.[60] By the mid-1950s, although still seen at fashionable nightspots and theatre premieres, the set was depleted by its members getting married. As she reached her late twenties unmarried, the press increasingly turned from predicting whom she might marry to suspecting she would remain a spinster.[61]
'Romances' and the press (1947–1959)
[edit]The press avidly discussed "the world's most eligible bachelor-girl"[62] and her alleged romances with more than 30 bachelors,[63][64] including David Mountbatten, Michael I of Romania,[65] Dominic Elliot,[66] Colin Tennant (later Baron Glenconner),[67] Prince Henry of Hesse-Kassel,[68] and future Canadian prime minister John Turner.[69][70] Most had titles and almost all were wealthy. Lord Blandford and Lord Dalkeith, both wealthy sons of dukes, were the likeliest potential husbands. Her family reportedly hoped that Margaret would marry Dalkeith, but, unlike him, Margaret was uninterested in the outdoors.[64][71] Billy Wallace, sole heir to a £2.8 million (£93 million today) fortune and an old friend, was reportedly Margaret's favourite date during the mid-1950s.[62][72] During her 21st birthday party at Balmoral in August 1951,[73] the press was disappointed to only photograph Margaret with Townsend,[63] frequently seen in the background of pictures of royal appearances,[74][64] and to her parents a trusted companion as Elizabeth's duties increased.[64] The following month her father underwent surgery for lung cancer, and Margaret was appointed one of the Counsellors of State who undertook the King's official duties while he was incapacitated.[75] Her father died five months later, on 6 February 1952, and her sister acceded as Elizabeth II.[76]
Romance with Peter Townsend
[edit]Early relationship
[edit]During the war, the King suggested choosing palace aides who were highly qualified men from the military, instead of only aristocrats. Told that a handsome war hero had arrived,[49] the princesses met Townsend, the new equerry, on his first day at Buckingham Palace in 1944; Elizabeth reportedly told her sister, 13 years old, "Bad luck, he's married".[77] A temporary assignment of three months from the RAF became permanent. The King and Queen were fond of Townsend; the King is said to have seen the calm and efficient war veteran as the son he never had.[78][77][64] He may have been aware of Margaret's infatuation with the non-titled and non-wealthy Townsend, reportedly seeing the courtier reluctantly obey the princess's order to carry her up the stairs at the Palace after a party.[64]
Townsend was so often near Margaret that gossip columnists overlooked him as a suitor for the princess.[74] When their relationship began is unclear. Margaret told friends she fell in love with him during the 1947 South Africa tour, where they often went riding together.[79] Her biographer Craig Brown stated that, according to a National Trust curator, Townsend requested the bedroom next to hers during a trip to Belfast in October 1947.[80] In November 1948, they attended the inauguration of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands. In later life, Townsend admitted at this point there was an attraction between them, but neither of them ever acknowledged it to one another. Not long after, he discovered his wife Rosemary was involved in an extramarital affair, which ended.[81] Contemporary anecdotes about their closeness then dissipated until late 1950, when friendship seems to have rekindled, coinciding with Townsend's appointment as Deputy Master of the Household and the breakdown of his marriage.[82]
From spring 1951, several accounts described a growing romantic attraction. A footman told how the King diverted the pair's picnic plans, adding that whatever the King and Queen knew about the developing relationship, most royal staff noticed as it was obvious to them.[83] Townsend said that his love for her began in Balmoral in 1951, and recalled an incident there in August when the princess woke him from a nap after a picnic lunch while the King watched, suggesting the King was aware.[84] Townsend and his wife separated in 1951,[85] which was noticed by the press by July.[86]
Margaret was grief-stricken by her father's death and was prescribed sedatives to help her sleep.[87] Of her father she wrote, "He was such a wonderful person, the very heart and centre of our happy family."[88] She was consoled by her deeply held Christian beliefs,[89] sometimes attending church twice daily.[64] She resumed attending events with her family in April and returned to royal engagements and social appearances when official mourning ended in June. American newspapers noted her increasing vitality and speculated that she must be in love.[90] With the widowed Queen Mother, Margaret moved out of Buckingham Palace and into Clarence House in May 1953, while the new queen and her family moved out of Clarence House and into Buckingham Palace.[91] After George VI's death, Townsend was appointed Comptroller of the Queen Mother's household.[92]
In June 1952, the estranged Townsends hosted Margaret, along with her sister Elizabeth and brother-in-law Philip, at a cocktail party at their home.[93][94] A month later, Rosemary Townsend and her new partner John de László attended the Royal Windsor Horse Show.[95] It is thought the romance between Margaret and Townsend began around this time.[96] The first reports that Townsend and Margaret wished to marry began in August 1952,[97] but these remained uncommon. The Townsend divorce in November received little coverage in Britain and in greater detail abroad.[98] After the divorce was finalized in December 1952, however, rumours spread about him and Margaret;[64] the divorce, and shared grief over the King's death in February 1952, likely helped them come together[77] within the privacy of Clarence House, where Margaret had her own apartment.[79]
Marriage proposal
[edit]Private Secretary to the Queen Sir Alan Lascelles wrote that Townsend told Lascelles he had asked Margaret to marry him shortly before Christmas 1952.[99] Other sources claim it occurred in February or April 1953.[63][100] He was 15 years her senior and had two children from his previous marriage. Margaret accepted and informed her sister, the Queen, whose consent was required by the Royal Marriages Act 1772. During the abdication crisis, the Church of England had refused to countenance the remarriage of the divorced. Queen Mary had recently died, and, after the coronation of Elizabeth II, the new queen planned to tour the Commonwealth for six months. She told her sister, "Under the circumstances, it isn't unreasonable for me to ask you to wait a year",[101] and to keep the relationship secret until after the coronation.[78]

Although foreign media speculated on Margaret and Townsend's relationship, the British press did not. After reporters saw her plucking fluff from his coat during the coronation on 2 June 1953—"I never thought a thing about it, and neither did Margaret", Townsend later said; "After that the storm broke"[63][79]—The People first mentioned the relationship in Britain[102] on 14 June. With the headline "They Must Deny it NOW",[84] the front-page article warned that "scandalous rumours about Princess Margaret are racing around the world", which the newspaper stated were "of course, utterly untrue".[49][103] The foreign press believed that the Regency Act 1953—which made Prince Philip regent instead of Margaret on the Queen's death—was enacted to allow Margaret to marry Townsend, but as late as 23 July most other British newspapers except the Daily Mirror did not discuss the rumours. Acting Prime Minister Rab Butler asked that the "deplorable speculation" end, without mentioning Margaret or Townsend.[74][104]
The constitutional crisis that the proposed marriage caused was public.[78] The Queen was advised by Lascelles to post Townsend abroad, but she refused and instead transferred him from the Queen Mother's household to her own,[105] although Townsend did not accompany Margaret as planned on a tour of Southern Rhodesia.[64] Winston Churchill personally approved of "a lovely young royal lady married to a gallant young airman", but Clementine Churchill reminded her husband that he had made the same mistake during the abdication crisis.[106][102] The Cabinet refused to approve the marriage,[107] and Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, did not approve of Margaret marrying a divorced man; opponents said that the marriage would threaten the monarchy as Edward VIII's had.[64] The Church of England Newspaper said that Margaret "is a dutiful churchwoman who knows what strong views leaders of the church hold in this matter", but the Sunday Express—which had supported Edward and Wallis—asked, "IF THEY WANT TO MARRY, WHY SHOULDN'T THEY?".[74]
Churchill discussed the marriage at the 1953 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference held with the coronation; the Statute of Westminster 1931 requires Dominion parliaments to also approve any Bill of Renunciation changing the line of succession. The Canadian government stated that altering the line twice in 25 years would harm the monarchy.[71] Churchill informed the Queen that both his cabinet and Dominion prime ministers were against the marriage, and that Parliament would not approve a marriage that would be unrecognised by the Church of England unless Margaret renounced her rights to the throne.[108][106]
Philip was reportedly the most opposed to Townsend in the royal family, while Margaret's mother and sister wanted her to be happy but could not approve of the marriage. Besides Townsend's divorce, two major problems were financial and constitutional. Margaret did not possess her sister's large fortune and would need the £6,000 annual civil list allowance and £15,000 additional allowance Parliament had provided for her upon a suitable marriage. She did not object to being removed from the line of succession to the throne, as Elizabeth and all her children dying was unlikely, but receiving parliamentary approval for the marriage would be difficult and uncertain.[64][41] At the age of 25 Margaret would not need the Queen's permission under the 1772 Act;[109] she could, after notifying the Privy Council of the United Kingdom, marry in one year if Parliament did not prevent her. Churchill told Elizabeth, however, that if one could easily leave the line of succession, another could easily enter the line, dangerous for a hereditary monarchy.[71]
Elizabeth told the couple to wait until 1955, when Margaret would be 25,[109] avoiding the Queen having to publicly disapprove of her sister's marriage.[64] Lascelles—who compared Townsend to Theudas "boasting himself to be somebody"—hoped that separating him and Margaret would end their romance.[110] Churchill arranged for Townsend's assignment as air attaché at the British Embassy in Brussels; he was sent on 15 July 1953, before Margaret's return from Rhodesia on 30 July.[106] The assignment was so sudden that the British ambassador learnt about it from a newspaper. Although Margaret and Townsend knew about his new job, they had reportedly been promised a few days together before his departure.[71]
Press coverage
[edit]For two years, press speculation continued. In Brussels, Townsend only said that "The word must come from somebody else". He avoided parties and being seen with women. With few duties (the sinecure was abolished after him), Townsend improved his French and horsemanship. He joined a Belgian show jumping club and rode in races around Europe.[71] Margaret was told by the Church that she would be unable to receive communion if she married a divorced man.[111] Three quarters of Sunday Express readers opposed the relationship, and Mass-Observation recorded criticism of the "silly little fool" as a poor example for young women who emulated her.[84] Other newspaper polls showed popular support for Margaret's personal choice, regardless of Church teaching or government.[112] Ninety-seven per cent of Daily Mirror readers supported marriage, and a Daily Express editorial stated that even if the Archbishop of Canterbury was displeased, "she would best please the vast majority of ordinary folk [by finding] happiness for herself".[64][71]
The couple were not restricted on communicating by mail and telephone.[64][71] Margaret worked with friends on charity productions of Lord and Lady Algy and The Frog, and publicly dated men such as Tennant[49] and Wallace.[62] In January 1955, she made the first of many trips to the Caribbean, perhaps to distract, and as a reward for being apart from Townsend. The attaché secretly travelled to Britain; while the palace was aware of one visit, he reportedly made other trips for nights and weekends with the princess at Clarence House—her apartment had its own front door—and friends' homes.[49][64]

That spring Townsend for the first time spoke to the press: "I am sick of being made to hide in my apartment like a thief", but whether he could marry "involves more people than myself". He reportedly believed that his exile from Margaret would soon end,[71] their love was strong, and that the British people would support marrying.[64] Townsend received a bodyguard and police guard around his apartment after the Belgian government received threats on his life,[71] but the British government still said nothing. Stating that people were more interested in the couple than the recent 1955 United Kingdom general election, on 29 May the Daily Express published an editorial demanding that Buckingham Palace confirm or deny the rumours.[113]
The press described Margaret's 25th birthday, 21 August 1955, as the day she was free to marry,[71] and expected an announcement about Townsend soon. Three hundred journalists waited outside Balmoral, four times as many as those later following Diana, Princess of Wales.[49] "COME ON MARGARET!", the Daily Mirror's front page said two days earlier, asking her to "please make up your mind!".[64][114] On 12 October Townsend returned from Brussels as Margaret's suitor. The royal family devised a system in which it did not host Townsend, but he and Margaret formally courted each other at dinner parties hosted by friends[71] such as Mark Bonham Carter.[115][116] A Gallup poll found that 59% of Britons approved of their marrying, with 17% opposed.[114][84] Women in the East End of London shouted "Go on, Marg, do what you want" at the princess.[102] Although the couple was never seen together in public during this time,[103] the general consensus was that they would marry. Crowds waited outside Clarence House, and a global audience read daily updates and rumours on newspaper front pages.[114][115][117][118][119]
"Nothing much else than Princess Margaret's affairs is being talked of in this country", The Manchester Guardian said on 15 October. "NOW – THE NATION WAITS" was a typical headline.[114] Observers interpreted Buckingham Palace's request to the press to respect Margaret's privacy—the first time the palace discussed the princess's recent personal life—as evidence of an imminent betrothal announcement,[118][71][120] probably before the Opening of Parliament on 25 October.[117] As no announcement occurred—the Daily Mirror on 17 October showed a photograph of Margaret's left hand with the headline "NO RING YET!"[114]—the press wondered why. Parliamentarians "are frankly puzzled by the way the affair has been handled", the News Chronicle wrote. "If a marriage is on, they ask, why not announce it quickly? If there is to be no marriage, why allow the couple to continue to meet without a clear denial of the rumours?"[115]
Why a betrothal did not occur is unclear. Margaret may have been uncertain of her desire, having written to Prime Minister Anthony Eden in August that "It is only by seeing him in this way that I feel I can properly decide whether I can marry him or not".[109] Margaret's authorized biographer Christopher Warwick said that the letter was evidence that her love for Townsend was not as strong as the public believed, and that she wanted only the prime minister and Elizabeth to know of her uncertainty.[121] Margaret may have told Townsend as early as 12 October that governmental and familial opposition to their marriage had not changed; it is possible that neither they nor Elizabeth fully understood until that year how difficult the 1772 Act made a royal marriage without the monarch's permission.[49] An influential 26 October editorial in The Times stating that "The QUEEN's sister married to a divorced man (even though the innocent party) would be irrevocably disqualified from playing her part in the essential royal function" represented The Establishment's view of what it considered a possibly dangerous crisis.[114][103] It convinced many, who had believed that the media were exaggerating, that Margaret really might defy the Church and royal standards. Leslie Weatherhead, President of the Methodist Conference, now criticized the proposed marriage.[107]
Townsend recalled that "we felt mute and numbed at the centre of this maelstrom";[84] Elizabeth also wanted the media circus to end.[77] Townsend only had his RAF income and, other than a talent for writing, had no experience in other work.[71] He wrote in his autobiography that Margaret "could have married me only if she had been prepared to give up everything – her position, her prestige, her privy purse. I simply hadn't the weight, I knew it, to counterbalance all she would have lost"[120] for what Kenneth Rose described as "life in a cottage on a Group Captain's salary".[77] Royal historian Hugo Vickers wrote that "Lascelles's separation plan had worked and the love between them had died".[110] Warwick said that "having spent two years apart, they were no longer as in love as they had been. Townsend was not the love of her life – the love of her life was her father, King George VI, whom she adored".[31]
More than 100 journalists waited at Balmoral when Eden arrived to discuss the marriage with Elizabeth and Margaret on 1 October 1955.[71] Lord Kilmuir, the Lord Chancellor, that month prepared a secret government document on the proposed marriage.[64][49] According to a 1958 biography of Townsend by Norman Barrymaine and other accounts, Eden said that his government would oppose in Parliament Margaret retaining her royal status. Parliament might pass resolutions opposing the marriage, which the people would see as a disagreement between government and monarchy; Lord Salisbury, a High Anglican, might resign from the government rather than help pass a Bill of Renunciation. While the government could not prevent the marriage when Margaret became a private individual after a Bill of Renunciation, she would no longer be a Counsellor of State and would lose her civil list allowance; otherwise, taxpayers would subsidise a divorced man and his sons. The Church would consider any children from the marriage to be illegitimate. Eden recommended that, like her uncle Edward and his wife Wallis, Margaret and Townsend leave Britain[71][77] for several years.[49][103][120]
Papers released in 2004 to the National Archives disagree. They show that Elizabeth and Eden (who had been divorced and remarried himself) planned to amend the 1772 Act. Margaret would have been able to marry Townsend by removing her and any children from the marriage from the line of succession, and thus the Queen's permission would no longer be necessary. Margaret would be allowed to keep her royal title and her allowance, stay in the country, and even continue with her public duties. Eden described Elizabeth's attitude in a letter on the subject to the Commonwealth prime ministers as "Her Majesty would not wish to stand in the way of her sister's happiness". Eden himself was sympathetic; "Exclusion from the Succession would not entail any other change in Princess Margaret's position as a member of the Royal Family", he wrote.[109]
On 28 October 1955 final draft of the plan, Margaret would announce that she would marry Townsend and leave the line of succession. As prearranged by Eden, the Queen would consult with the British and Commonwealth governments, and then ask them to amend the 1772 Act. Eden would have told Parliament that the Act was "out of harmony with modern conditions". Kilmuir had advised Eden that the 1772 Act was flawed and might not apply to Margaret anyway. Kilmuir estimated that 75% of Britons would approve of allowing the marriage.[109] The August letter to Eden is evidence, Warwick said, that Margaret was aware of the government's intention to preserve her title and allowance.[121]
The decision not to marry was made on the 24th and for the following week, Margaret worked on the wording of her statement, which was released on the 31st.[122] It is unclear what or when she was told about the government proposal, drafted on the 28th. By the early 1980s she was still protesting to biographers that the couple had been given false hope marriage was possible and she would have ended the relationship sooner had she been informed otherwise.[123][124]
The Daily Mirror on 28 October discussed The Times's editorial with the headline "THIS CRUEL PLAN MUST BE EXPOSED". Although Margaret and Townsend had read the editorial the newspaper denounced as from "a dusty world and a forgotten age", they had earlier made their decision and written an announcement.[103][107]
End of relationship
[edit]On 31 October 1955, Margaret issued a statement:
I would like it to be known that I have decided not to marry Group Captain Peter Townsend. I have been aware that, subject to my renouncing my rights of succession, it might have been possible for me to contract a civil marriage. But mindful of the Church's teachings that Christian marriage is indissoluble, and conscious of my duty to the Commonwealth, I have resolved to put these considerations before others. I have reached this decision entirely alone, and in doing so I have been strengthened by the unfailing support and devotion of Group Captain Townsend.[125]
"Thoroughly drained, thoroughly demoralized", Margaret later said,[63] she and Townsend wrote the statement together. She refused when Oliver Dawnay, the Queen Mother's private secretary, asked to remove the word "devotion".[71][49] The written statement, signed "Margaret", was the first official confirmation of the relationship. Some Britons were disbelieving or angry while others, including clergy, were proud of Margaret for choosing duty and faith;[119] newspapers were evenly divided on the decision. Mass-Observation recorded indifference or criticism of the couple among men, but great interest among women, whether for or against. Kenneth Tynan, John Minton, Ronald Searle, and others signed an open letter from "the younger generation". Published in the Daily Express on 4 November, the letter said that the end of the relationship had exposed The Establishment and "our national hypocrisy".[114]
Townsend recalled that "We had reached the end of the road, our feelings for one another were unchanged, but they had incurred for us a burden so great that we decided together to lay it down".[63] The Associated Press said that Margaret's statement was almost "a rededication of her life to the duties of royalty, making unlikely any marriage for her in the near future";[119] the princess may have expected to never marry after the long relationship ended, because most of her eligible male friends were no longer bachelors.[126] Barrymaine agreed that Margaret intended the statement to mean that she would never marry, but wrote that Townsend likely did not accept any such vow to him by the princess, and his subsequent departure from Britain for two years was to not interfere with her life.[71] "We both had a feeling of unimaginable relief. We were liberated at last from this monstrous problem", Townsend said.[84]
After resigning from the RAF and travelling around the world for 18 months Townsend returned in March 1958; he and Margaret met several times, but could not avoid the press ("TOGETHER AGAIN") or royal disapproval. Townsend again left Britain to write a book about his trip; Barrymaine concluded in 1958 that "none of the fundamental obstacles to their marriage has been overcome – or shows any prospects of being overcome".[71][49] Townsend said during a 1970 book tour that he and Margaret did not correspond and they had not seen each other since a "friendly" 1958 meeting, "just like I think a lot of people never see their old girl friends".[127] Their love letters are in the Royal Archives and will not be available to the public until 100 years after Margaret's birth, August 2030.[63] These are unlikely to include Margaret's letters. In 1959, she wrote to Townsend in response to him informing her of his remarriage plans, accusing him of betraying their vow not to marry anyone else and requesting her love letters to him be destroyed.[128] He claimed he complied with her wishes, but kept this letter and an envelope of burned shards of the vow she had sent, eventually destroying these also. He was apparently unaware Margaret had already broken the pact by her engagement to Billy Wallace as it was not revealed until many years later.[129]
In October 1993, a friend of Margaret revealed she had met Townsend for what turned out to be the last time before his death in 1995. She had not wanted to attend the reunion they'd both been invited to, in 1992, for fear it might be picked up by the press, so she asked to see him privately instead.[130] Margaret said that he looked "exactly the same, except he had grey hair".[63] Guests said he had not really changed, and that they just sat chatting like old friends. They also found him disgruntled and had convinced himself that in agreeing to part, he and Margaret had set a noble example which seemed to have been in vain.[131]
Billy Wallace later said that "The thing with Townsend was a girlish nonsense that got out of hand. It was never the big thing on her part that people claim".[63]
Marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones
[edit]

Margaret accepted one of Wallace's many proposals to marry in 1956, but the engagement ended before an official announcement when he admitted to a romance in the Bahamas; "I had my chance and blew it with my big mouth", Wallace said.[63] Margaret did not reveal this publicly until an interview and subsequent biography with Nigel Dempster in 1977.[132]
Margaret met the photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones at a supper party in 1958.[133] They became engaged in October 1959.[134] Armstrong-Jones proposed to Margaret with a ruby engagement ring surrounded by diamonds in the shape of a rosebud.[135][136] She reportedly accepted his proposal a day after learning from Townsend that he intended to marry a young Belgian woman,[63] Marie-Luce Jamagne, who was half his age and greatly resembled Margaret.[137][120] Margaret's announcement of her engagement, on 26 February 1960, surprised the press, as she had concealed the romance from reporters.[138]
Margaret married Armstrong-Jones at Westminster Abbey on 6 May 1960.[139] The ceremony was the first royal wedding to be broadcast on television,[63] and it attracted viewing figures of 300 million worldwide.[140] 2,000 guests were invited for the wedding ceremony.[133] Margaret's wedding dress was designed by Norman Hartnell and worn with the Poltimore tiara.[38] She had eight young bridesmaids, led by her niece, Princess Anne.[141] The Duke of Edinburgh escorted the bride, and the best man was Roger Gilliatt.[133] Archbishop of Canterbury Geoffrey Fisher conducted the marriage service.[133] Following the ceremony, the couple made the traditional appearance on the balcony of Buckingham Palace.[133] The honeymoon was a six-week Caribbean cruise aboard the royal yacht Britannia.[142] As a wedding present, Colin Tennant gave her a plot of land on his private Caribbean island, Mustique.[143] The newlyweds moved into rooms in Kensington Palace.[144]
In 1961, Margaret's husband was created Earl of Snowdon. The couple had two children (both born by Caesarean section at Margaret's request):[145] David, born 3 November 1961, and Sarah, born 1 May 1964.[102] The marriage widened Margaret's social circle beyond the court and aristocracy to include show business celebrities and bohemians. At the time, it was thought to reflect the breaking down of British class barriers.[146] The Snowdons experimented with the styles and fashions of the 1960s.[147]
Separation and divorce
[edit]Both parties in the marriage regularly engaged in extramarital relationships. Lord Snowdon had a series of affairs, including with long-term mistress, Ann Hills, and Lady Jacqueline Rufus-Isaacs, daughter of the 3rd Marquess of Reading. Anne De Courcy's 2008 biography summarises the situation with a quote from a close friend: "If it moves, he'll have it."[148]
Reportedly, Margaret had her first extramarital affair in 1966, with her daughter's godfather Anthony Barton, a Bordeaux wine producer.[149][63] A year later she had a one-month liaison with Robin Douglas-Home, a nephew of former British prime minister Alec Douglas-Home.[150][63] Margaret claimed that her relationship with Douglas-Home was platonic, but her letters to him (which were later sold) were intimate.[151] Douglas-Home, who suffered from depression, died by suicide 18 months after the split with Margaret.[63] Claims that she was romantically involved with musician Mick Jagger,[152] actor Peter Sellers, and Australian cricketer Keith Miller are unproven.[153] According to biographer Charlotte Breese, entertainer Leslie Hutchinson had a "brief liaison" with Margaret in 1955.[154] A 2009 biography of actor David Niven included assertions, based on information from Niven's widow and a good friend of Niven's, that he had had an affair with Margaret, who was 20 years his junior.[155] In 1975, Margaret was listed among women with whom actor Warren Beatty had had romantic relationships.[156] John Bindon, an actor from Fulham, who had spent time in prison, sold his story to the Daily Mirror, boasting of a close relationship with Margaret.[157]

Beyond extramarital relationships, the marriage was accompanied by drugs, alcohol, and bizarre behaviour by both parties, such as Snowdon's leaving lists of "things I hate about you" for Margaret to find between the pages of books she read. According to biographer Sarah Bradford, one note read: "You look like a Jewish manicurist and I hate you".[158]
By the early 1970s, the couple had drifted apart. In September 1973, Colin Tennant introduced Margaret to Roddy Llewellyn. Llewellyn was 17 years her junior. In 1974, she invited him as a guest to Les Jolies Eaux, the holiday home she had built on Mustique.[159] It was the first of several visits. Margaret described their relationship as "a loving friendship".[160] Once, when Llewellyn left on an impulsive trip to Turkey, Margaret became emotionally distraught and took an overdose of sleeping tablets.[161] "I was so exhausted because of everything", she later said, "that all I wanted to do was sleep".[162] As she recovered, her ladies-in-waiting kept Snowdon away from her, afraid that seeing him would distress her further.[163]
In February 1976, a picture of Margaret and Llewellyn in swimsuits on Mustique was published on the front page of a tabloid, the News of the World. The press portrayed Margaret as a predatory older woman and Llewellyn as her toyboy lover.[164] On 19 March 1976, Margaret and Snowdon publicly acknowledged that their marriage had irretrievably broken down and that they had decided to separate.[165][166] Some politicians suggested removing Margaret from the civil list. Labour MPs denounced her as "a royal parasite"[167] and a "floosie".[168] On 24 May 1978, the decree nisi for the couple's divorce was granted.[166] In the same month, Margaret was taken ill, and diagnosed as suffering from gastroenteritis and alcoholic hepatitis,[169] although Warwick denied that she was ever an alcoholic.[31] On 11 July 1978, the divorce was finalised.[170] It was the first divorce of a senior member of the British royal family since that of Princess Victoria Melita of Edinburgh in 1901. Allegedly, Margaret did not want a divorce: she tried to make her marriage succeed, but there were "too many challenges". Devastated by the divorce, Margaret never remarried.[171] On 15 December 1978, Snowdon married Lucy Lindsay-Hogg, but he and Margaret remained close friends.[172]
In 1981, Llewellyn married Tatiana Soskin, whom he had known for 10 years.[173] Margaret remained close friends with them both.[174]
Public life
[edit]
Among Margaret's first official engagements was launching the ocean liner Edinburgh Castle in Belfast in 1947.[175] Subsequently, Margaret went on multiple tours of various places; in her first major tour she joined her parents and sister for a tour of South Africa in 1947. Her tour aboard Britannia to the British colonies in the Caribbean in 1955 created a sensation throughout the West Indies, and calypsos were dedicated to her.[176] As colonies of the British Commonwealth of Nations sought nationhood, Margaret represented the Crown at independence ceremonies in Jamaica in 1962[177] and Tuvalu and Dominica in 1978. Her visit to Tuvalu was cut short by an illness, which may have been viral pneumonia,[178] and she was flown to Australia to recuperate.[179] Other overseas tours included East Africa and Mauritius in 1956, the United States in 1965, Japan in 1969 and 1979,[180] the United States and Canada in 1974,[181] Australia in 1975,[182] the Philippines in 1980,[183] Swaziland in 1981,[184] and China in 1987.[185]
In August 1979, Margaret's second cousin once-removed Lord Mountbatten and members of his family were killed by a bomb planted by the Provisional Irish Republican Army.[186] That October, while on a fundraising tour of the United States on behalf of the Royal Opera House, Margaret was seated at a dinner reception in Chicago with columnist Abra Anderson and Mayor Jane Byrne. Margaret told them that the royal family had been moved by the many letters of condolence from Ireland.[187] The following day, Anderson's rival Irv Kupcinet published a claim that Margaret had referred to the Irish as "pigs".[188] Margaret, Anderson, and Byrne all issued immediate denials,[187] but the damage was already done.[189] The rest of the tour drew demonstrations, and Margaret's security was doubled in the face of physical threats.[190]
Charity work
[edit]
Margaret's main interests were welfare charities, music and ballet.[191] She was president of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC),[191] the Royal Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (Children 1st),[192] and Invalid Children's Aid Nationwide (also called 'I CAN'). She was also Grand President of the St John Ambulance Brigade.[191] Margaret was president or patron of numerous organisations, such as the West Indies Olympic Association, the Girl Guides,[191] Northern Ballet Theatre,[193] Birmingham Royal Ballet,[194] Scottish Ballet,[192] Tenovus Cancer Care,[195] the Royal College of Nursing,[195] and the London Lighthouse (an AIDS charity that has since merged with the Terrence Higgins Trust).[16] In her capacity as president of the Royal Ballet, she played a key role in launching a fund for Dame Margot Fonteyn, who was experiencing financial troubles.[196] With the help of the Children's Royal Variety Performance, she also organised yearly fundraisers for NSPCC.[196] At some points Margaret was criticised for not being as active as other members of the royal family.[191]
Illness and death
[edit]
Margaret's later life was marred by illness and disability.[197] She began smoking cigarettes in her late teens and had continued to smoke heavily for many years thereafter.[198][199] In the 1970s, she suffered a nervous breakdown and was treated for depression by a psychiatrist from the Priory Clinic.[200] Later on, she suffered from migraines, laryngitis, and bronchitis.[201] In January 1980, she was operated on at the London Clinic to remove a benign skin lesion.[197] On 5 January 1985, she had part of her left lung removed; the operation drew parallels with that of her father 34 years earlier.[202] She quit smoking in 1991[203] or January 1993,[199] although servants still claimed they smelt cigarette smoke in her apartment[199] and she continued to drink heavily.[203]
In January 1993, Margaret was admitted to hospital for pneumonia. She experienced a mild stroke on 23 February 1998 at her holiday home in Mustique.[204] Early the following year, she suffered severe scalds to her feet in a bathroom accident, which affected her mobility in that she required support when walking and sometimes used a wheelchair.[205] She was hospitalised on 10 January 2001, due to loss of appetite and swallowing problems after a further stroke.[206][207] By March 2001, strokes had left her with partial vision and paralysis on the left side.[208] Margaret's last public appearances were at the 101st birthday celebrations of her mother in August 2001, and the 100th birthday celebration of her aunt Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester, that December.[209]
Margaret died in her sleep at King Edward VII's Hospital, London, at 6:30 am on 9 February 2002, aged 71, three days after the 50th anniversary of her father's death. She was 11th in line to the throne at the time of her death. The previous day, she had suffered another stroke that was followed by cardiac problems.[210][197][192] Prince Charles paid tribute to his aunt in a television broadcast.[211][212] UK politicians and foreign leaders sent their condolences as well.[213][214] Following her death, private memorial services were held at St Mary Magdalene Church and Glamis Castle.[215]
Margaret's coffin, draped in her personal standard, was taken from Kensington Palace to St James's Palace before her funeral.[216] Her funeral was held on 15 February 2002, the 50th anniversary of her father's funeral.[217] In line with her wishes, the ceremony was a private service at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, for family and friends.[218] Unlike most other members of the royal family, she was cremated, at Slough Crematorium.[219] Her lady-in-waiting, Lady Glenconner, stated that Margaret found the Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore "very gloomy" and would have wanted to be where her father was buried.[220] Margaret's ashes were temporarily placed in the Royal Vault of St George's Chapel. Following the Queen Mother's death seven weeks later and after her funeral, they were interred in the King George VI Memorial Chapel to rest alongside her parents.[221][217][222] A service of thanksgiving and remembrance for Margaret was held at Westminster Abbey on 19 April 2002.[223][224] A memorial service marking the tenth anniversary of the deaths of both Margaret and the Queen Mother was held on 30 March 2012 at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, attended by Queen Elizabeth II and other members of the royal family.[225]
Legacy
[edit]Image
[edit]We thank thee Lord who by thy spirit doth our faith restore
When we with worldly things commune & prayerless close our door
We lose our precious gift divine to worship and adore
Then thou our Saviour, fill our hearts to love thee evermore
Observers often characterised Margaret as a spoiled snob capable of cutting remarks and hauteur.[227] Critics claimed that she even looked down on her grandmother Queen Mary because Mary was born a princess with the lower "Serene Highness" style, whereas Margaret was a "Royal Highness" by birth.[228] Their letters, however, provide no indication of friction between them.[229]
Margaret could also be charming and informal. People who came into contact with her could be perplexed by her swings between frivolity and formality.[230] Marion Crawford wrote in her memoir: "Impulsive and bright remarks she made became headlines and, taken out of their context, began to produce in the public eye an oddly distorted personality that bore little resemblance to the Margaret we knew."[231]
Margaret's acquaintance Gore Vidal, the American writer, wrote: "She was far too intelligent for her station in life". He recalled a conversation with Margaret in which, discussing her public notoriety, she said: "It was inevitable, when there are two sisters and one is the Queen, who must be the source of honour and all that is good, while the other must be the focus of the most creative malice, the evil sister".[232]

As a child, Margaret enjoyed pony shows, but unlike other family members she did not express interest in hunting, shooting, and fishing in adulthood.[196] She became interested in ballet from a very young age and enjoyed participating in amateur plays. She directed one such play, titled The Frogs, with her aristocratic friends as cast members.[196] Actors and film stars were among the regular visitors to her residence at Kensington Palace.[196] In January 1981, she was the guest for an episode of BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs. Her musical choices included "Sixteen Tons" by Tennessee Ernie Ford which she said had entertained her in a traffic jam. Her favourite was Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake.[233] In 1984, she appeared as herself in an episode of the radio drama The Archers, becoming the first member of the royal family to take part in a BBC drama.[234]
Margaret's private life was for many years the subject of intense speculation by media and royalty watchers. Her house on Mustique, designed by her husband's uncle Oliver Messel, a stage designer, was her favourite holiday destination.[235] Allegations of wild parties and drug taking also surfaced in the media.[236]
Margaret was a devout Anglican her whole life,[237] though "she had desires that often conflicted with her faith".[171] At one point, she considered becoming Roman Catholic.[238]
Following Margaret's death, her lady-in-waiting, Lady Glenconner, said that "[Margaret] was devoted to the Queen and tremendously supportive of her".[239] Margaret was described by her cousin Lady Elizabeth Shakerley as "somebody who had a wonderful capacity for giving a lot of people pleasure and she was making a very, very, very good and loyal friend".[240] Another cousin, Lord Lichfield, said that "[Margaret] was pretty sad towards the end of her life because it was a life unfulfilled".[239]
The Independent wrote in Townsend's 1995 obituary that "The immense display of popular sentiment and interest [in the relationship] can now be seen to have constituted a watershed in the nation's attitude towards divorce".[41] The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Church received much of the popular anger toward the end of the relationship.[114] Randolph Churchill believed that rumours "that Fisher had intervened to prevent the Princess from marrying Townsend has done incalculable harm to the Church of England";[106] a Gallup poll found that 28% agreed, and 59% disagreed, with the Church's refusal to remarry a divorced person while the other spouse was alive.[114] Biographer Warwick suggests that Margaret's most enduring legacy is an accidental one. Perhaps unwittingly, Margaret paved the way for public acceptance of royal divorce. Her life, if not her actions, made the decisions and choices of her sister's children, three of whom divorced, easier than they otherwise would have been.[241]
Eden reportedly told Elizabeth in Balmoral when discussing Margaret and Townsend that, regardless of outcome, the monarchy would be damaged.[71] In 1995, Harold Brooks-Baker was quoted in Townsend's obituary: "In my opinion, this was the turning point to disaster for the royal family. After Princess Margaret was denied marriage, it backfired and more or less ruined Margaret's life. The Queen decided that from then on, anyone someone in her family wanted to marry would be more or less acceptable. The royal family and the public now feel that they've gone too far in the other direction".[120]
Fashion and style
[edit]
During her lifetime, Margaret was considered a fashion icon.[242][243][244] Her fashion earned the nickname 'The Margaret Look'.[244] The princess, dubbed a 'royal rebel', styled herself in contrast to her sister's prim and timeless style, adopting trendy mod accessories, such as brightly coloured headscarves and glamorous sunglasses.[242][245][246] Margaret developed a close relationship with atelier Christian Dior, wearing his designs throughout her life and becoming one of his most prominent customers. In 1950, he designed a cream gown worn for her 21st birthday, which has been cited as an iconic part of fashion history.[247][248][249] Throughout the decade, Margaret was known for wearing floral-print dresses, bold-hued ballgowns and luxurious fabrics, accessorising with diamonds, pearls, and fur stoles.[246][245] British Vogue wrote that Margaret's style 'hit her stride' in the mid-60s, where she was photographed alongside celebrities like The Beatles, Frank Sinatra and Sophia Loren.[250] Margaret was also known for her "magnificent" hats and headdresses, including a canary feather hat worn on a 1962 Jamaica visit and a peacock feather pillbox hat to the 1973 Royal Ascot.[246] Marie Claire stated that the princess "refused to compromise" on her style later in life, continuing with trends of big sleeves and strapless evening gowns.[246]
In April 2007, an exhibition titled Princess Line – The Fashion Legacy of Princess Margaret opened at Kensington Palace, showcasing contemporary fashion from British designers such as Vivienne Westwood inspired by Margaret's legacy of style. Christopher Bailey's Spring 2006 collection for Burberry was inspired by Margaret's look from the 1960s.[251]
Finances
[edit]In her lifetime, Margaret's fortune was estimated to be around £20 million, with most of it being inherited from her father.[252] She also inherited pieces of art and antiques from Queen Mary, and Dame Margaret Greville left her £20,000 in 1943.[252] In 1999, her son, Lord Linley, sold his mother's Caribbean residence Les Jolies Eaux for a reported £2.4 million.[252] At the time of her death Margaret received £219,000 from the civil list.[252] Following her death, she left a £7.6 million estate to her two children, which was cut down to £4.5 million after inheritance tax.[252] In June 2006, much of Margaret's estate was auctioned by Christie's to meet the tax and, in her son's words, "normal family requirements such as educating her grandchildren",[253] though some of the items were sold in aid of charities such as the Stroke Association.[254] Reportedly, Elizabeth had made it clear that the proceeds from any item that was given to her sister in an official capacity must be donated to charities.[255] A world record price of £1.24 million was set by a Fabergé clock.[256] The Poltimore Tiara, which she wore for her wedding in 1960, sold for £926,400.[257] A portrait of Margaret by Pietro Annigoni was purchased back by her son at the price of £680,000–more than three times the original estimate–once it became apparent that the sale had far exceeded expectations.[258][259] The sale of her effects totalled £13,658,000.[257][260]
In popular culture
[edit]Actresses who have portrayed Margaret include Lucy Cohu (The Queen's Sister, 2005), Katie McGrath (The Queen, 2009),[261] Ramona Marquez (The King's Speech, 2010), Bel Powley (A Royal Night Out, 2015), Olivia Benjamin (Father Brown, 2023), and Vanessa Kirby, Helena Bonham Carter, and Lesley Manville, who all played different stages of Margaret's life during The Crown, 2016–2023.[262][263] The young Princess Margaret was played by Beau Gadsdon.[264] The 2008 heist film, The Bank Job, revolves around alleged photos of Margaret.[265] A character, "Pantomime Princess Margaret", made regular appearances in the BBC's 1970s comedy show Monty Python's Flying Circus.[266]
Titles, styles, honours and arms
[edit]
Titles and styles
[edit]- 21 August 1930 – 11 December 1936: Her Royal Highness Princess Margaret of York[268]
- 11 December 1936 – 6 October 1961: Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret[269]
- 6 October 1961 – 9 February 2002: Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon
Honours
[edit]| Country | Date | Appointment | Ribbon | Post-nominal
letters |
Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 June 1947 | Companion of the Order of the Crown of India | CI | [270] | ||
| 23 June 1948 | Dame of Justice of the Order of St John of Jerusalem | DJStJ | [271] | ||
| 1948 | Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion | [272] | |||
| 1 June 1953 | Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order | GCVO | [273] | ||
| 1956 | Order of the Brilliant Star of Zanzibar, First Class | [272] | |||
| 20 June 1956 | Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St John of Jerusalem | GCStJ | [274] | ||
| 1960 | Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown | [272] | |||
| 1965 | Order of the Crown, Lion, and Spear of Toro Kingdom | [272] | |||
| 5 October 1971 | Order of the Precious Crown, First Class | [272] | |||
| 21 August 1990 | Recipient of the Royal Victorian Chain | [275] | |||
| Recipient of the Royal Family Order of George V | [276] | ||||
| Recipient of the Royal Family Order of George VI | [277] | ||||
| Recipient of the Royal Family Order of Elizabeth II | [276] |
Honorary military appointments
[edit]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Women's Royal Australian Army Corps[278]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Bermuda Regiment[279]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Highland Fusiliers of Canada[280]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Princess Louise Fusiliers[280]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment[280]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Northland Regiment[281]
Colonel-in-Chief of the 15th/19th The King's Royal Hussars[282]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Light Dragoons[283]
Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Highland Fusiliers (Princess Margaret's Own Glasgow and Ayrshire Regiment)
Colonel-in-Chief of the Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps[284]
Colonel-in-Chief of the 1st East Anglian Regiment (Royal Norfolk and Suffolk)[285]
Deputy Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Anglian Regiment[286]
Honorary Air Commodore, Royal Air Force Coningsby[287]
Lady Sponsor of HMS Illustrious[280]
Lady Sponsor of HMS Norfolk[280]
Non-national titles and honours
[edit]Scholastic
[edit]- 1962–1986: Chancellor of Keele University[288]
- 1956–1962: President of the University College of North Staffordshire (College became Keele University)[288]
Honorary academic degrees
[edit]- 1957: University of London, Doctor of Music[280]
- 1958: University of Cambridge, Doctor of Law[280][289]
- 1962: Keele University, Doctor of Letters[280][290]
Memberships and fellowships
[edit]- Royal Society of Medicine, Honorary Fellow[291]
Civic
[edit]- Master of the Bench of Lincoln's Inn[280]
Awards
[edit]Arms
[edit]
|
Issue
[edit]| Name | Birth | Marriage | Issue | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowdon | 3 November 1961 | 8 October 1993 Separated 2020 |
Serena Stanhope | Charles Armstrong-Jones, Viscount Linley Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones |
| Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones | 1 May 1964 | 14 July 1994 | Daniel Chatto | Samuel Chatto Arthur Chatto |
Ancestry
[edit]| Ancestors of Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon[294] |
|---|
References
[edit]- ^ In 2002, the Church of England changed its policy on marriages of divorced persons. Under certain circumstances, it now permits a person with a former spouse still living to remarry in church.[1] Archived 25 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine[2]
- ^ "No. 33636". The London Gazette. 22 August 1930. p. 5225.
- ^ Heald, p. 1; Warwick, pp. 27–28
- ^ Davies, Caroline (11 February 2002). "A tale of two sisters' enduring affection". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 10 January 2022.
- ^ "Princess Margaret – Growing up". CBBC. 9 February 2002. Archived from the original on 26 June 2022. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
- ^ "Henry John Forbes Simson 1872–1932". BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. 39 (4): 920–923. December 1932. doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.1932.tb16082.x. S2CID 221490066.
- ^ Rocco, Fiammetta (25 February 1998). "Ma'am darling: The princess driven by loyalty and duty". The Independent. Archived from the original on 26 June 2019. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- ^ Heald, p. 6; Warwick, p. 33
- ^ Her godparents were: the Prince of Wales (her paternal uncle, for whom his brother Prince George stood proxy); Princess Ingrid of Sweden (her paternal cousin, for whom another cousin, Lady Patricia Ramsay, stood proxy); Princess Victoria (her paternal great-aunt); Lady Rose Leveson-Gower (her maternal aunt); and the Hon David Bowes-Lyon (her maternal uncle).[8]
- ^ Warwick, p. 31
- ^ Warwick, pp. 31–32
- ^ Crawford, pp. 14–34; Heald, pp. 7–8; Warwick, pp. 35–39
- ^ Warwick, pp. 34, 120
- ^ Warwick, pp. 45–46
- ^ Quoted in Warwick, p. 52
- ^ a b c d e Bradford
- ^ Lisa Sheridan in From Cabbages to Kings, quoted by Warwick, pp. 51–52
- ^ Warwick, p. 52
- ^ "Captain Scott and J M Barrie: an unlikely friendship". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 10 January 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
- ^ Heald, p. 11; Warwick, p. 71
- ^ Heald, p. 18; Warwick, p. 76
- ^ Royal Support for the Scouting and Guiding Movements, Official Website of the British Monarchy, archived from the original on 24 January 2009, retrieved 25 July 2008
- ^ "The charitable princess", BBC News, 9 February 2002, archived from the original on 19 October 2022, retrieved 17 December 2008
- ^ Crawford, p. 110; Warwick, p. 98
- ^ Crawford, pp. 104–119; Warwick, pp. 99–101
- ^ Warwick, p. 102
- ^ Biography of HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother: Activities as Queen, Official website of the British monarchy, archived from the original on 10 October 2012, retrieved 28 July 2009
- ^ Crawford, pp. 137–141
- ^ a b "Children's Hour: Princess Elizabeth", BBC Archive, 13 October 1940, archived from the original on 27 November 2019, retrieved 16 September 2022
- ^ Dempster, p. 8
- ^ a b c Puente, Maria (8 February 2019). "Princess Margaret: PBS takes a look at the original 'Rebel Princess'". USA Today. Archived from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
- ^ Bradford; Heald, p. 9
- ^ Botham, p. 9
- ^ Hardman, Robert (2022). Queen of Our Times: The Life of Elizabeth II. Pegasus Books (published 17 March 2022). ISBN 978-1643139098.
- ^ Aronson, p. 92
- ^ "How a young Princess Elizabeth celebrated VE Day unnoticed among the crowds in London". The Independent. 14 June 2020. Archived from the original on 13 November 2023. Retrieved 8 November 2023.
- ^ "A Royal Night Out: What really happened the night the Princesses left the palace for VE Day". Tatler. 30 April 2020. Archived from the original on 16 June 2023. Retrieved 8 November 2023.
- ^ a b Helen Molesworth, Property from the Collection of Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon. Christie's Auction House, Jewellery Department, London, 2006. Auction of the Property of HRH Princess Margaret Archived 30 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Aronson, p. 97
- ^ Heald, pp. 38–39
- ^ a b c De-la-Noy, Michael (21 June 1995). "Obituary: Gp Capt Peter Townsend". The Independent. Archived from the original on 1 February 2020. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- ^ Heald, p. 53
- ^ Crawford, p. 111
- ^ Crawford, p. 164
- ^ "Younger Princess Favorite". The Hastings Daily Tribune. 20 November 1947. p. 21.
- ^ Warwick, p. 140
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- ^ a b "Keele Represented At Memorial Service For HRH The Princess Margaret". Keele University. 19 April 2002. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
- ^ "Princess Margaret & Lord Adrian, at the Cambridge University". Historic Images. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ "Honorary degrees". Keele University. 25 July 2024. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ "Medical News". The British Medical Journal. 2 (5057): 1378–1380. 7 December 1957. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.5057.1378. JSTOR 25384783. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ "QEII Award recipients – updated Aug 2016" (PDF). Royal Academy of Dance. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
- ^ Marks of cadency in the British royal family, Heraldica.org, archived from the original on 17 March 2018, retrieved 17 October 2008
- ^ Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1999) [1981]. Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (2nd ed.). London: Little, Brown. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-316-84820-6.
Bibliography
[edit]- Aronson, Theo (2001), Princess Margaret: A Biography, London: Michael O'Mara Books Limited, ISBN 1-85479-682-8
- Botham, Noel (2002), Margaret: The Last Real Princess, London: Blake Publishing Ltd, ISBN 1-903402-64-6
- Bradford, Sarah; Harrison, B.; Goldman, L. (January 2006). "Margaret Rose, Princess, countess of Snowdon (1930–2002)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (revised October 2008 ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/76713. Retrieved 7 December 2008. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
- Crawford, Marion (1950), The Little Princesses, London: Cassell and Co
- Heald, Tim (2007), Princess Margaret: A Life Unravelled, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, ISBN 978-0-297-84820-2
- Warwick, Christopher (2002), Princess Margaret: A Life of Contrasts, London: Carlton Publishing Group, ISBN 0-233-05106-6
External links
[edit]- Profile on the official site of the British Monarchy
- HRH Princess Margaret 1930–2002 at BBC News
- Death of Princess Margaret
- British Columbia Archives: video of Princess Margaret at a reception, HMS Hood Discovery, 1958[3]
- Newspaper clippings about Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
- Portraits of Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon at the National Portrait Gallery, London
Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon
View on GrokipediaHer early romantic involvement with Group Captain Peter Townsend, a divorced equerry, culminated in her public renunciation of marriage to him on 31 October 1955, citing the incompatibility with her royal duties and the Church of England's prohibition on the remarriage of divorced persons whose former spouses were living.[2]
In 1960, she married photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones at Westminster Abbey on 6 May, an event broadcast live on television for the first time; the couple, elevated to Earl and Countess of Snowdon, had two children—David (born 1961) and Sarah (born 1964)—before separating in 1976 and divorcing in 1978, marking the first divorce of a senior British royal since Henry VIII.[1][3][4]
Margaret fulfilled royal obligations as patron or president of more than 80 organizations, with emphases on children's welfare, ballet, and music, including presidencies of the Royal Ballet and the Girl Guides Association.[1]
Her later years were overshadowed by health decline from heavy smoking and alcohol consumption, resulting in strokes starting in 1998 and her death following complications from the third in 2002.[1]
Early Life
Birth and Family Background
Princess Margaret Rose was born at 9:22 p.m. on 21 August 1930 at Glamis Castle in Angus, Scotland, the seat of her mother's family.[5] [6] She was the younger daughter of Prince Albert, Duke of York—the second son of King George V—and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, Duchess of York, whom he had married in 1923.[7] Glamis Castle, a medieval fortress tied to the Lyon family for centuries, underscored Margaret's connection to Scottish nobility through her mother, whose lineage traced back to medieval Scottish royalty.[6] At birth, Margaret ranked fourth in the line of succession to the throne, behind her uncle Edward, Prince of Wales (the heir apparent); her father; and her four-year-old sister, Princess Elizabeth, born in 1926.[6] [8] This position reflected the standard male-preference primogeniture of the era, prioritizing the unmarried Edward and then Albert over his daughters until male heirs were considered. The Yorks resided primarily at 145 Piccadilly in London, maintaining a relatively private family life away from the immediate glare of kingship.[9] The abdication crisis of December 1936 dramatically altered this dynamic when Edward VIII relinquished the throne to marry Wallis Simpson, elevating Albert to King George VI. Margaret thereby advanced to second in line, immediately behind Elizabeth, who became heir presumptive.[10] [11] This unforeseen shift thrust the family into the constitutional forefront, with Margaret's early privileges—including access to royal estates and private education—cemented by her elevated status, though always subordinate to her sister's primacy.[7]Childhood and Wartime Experiences
Following the declaration of war on September 3, 1939, Princess Margaret, then aged nine, and her sister Princess Elizabeth were evacuated from London to Windsor Castle to shield them from potential bombing raids on the capital.[12] The princesses resided primarily at Windsor for the duration of the conflict, adhering to blackout measures, air raid drills, and food rationing alongside the castle staff and local evacuee children.[13] Their daily routine included limited exposure to wartime disruptions, such as occasional trips to bombed areas in London under parental supervision, but remained largely insulated within the castle's fortified grounds.[14] Education for Margaret continued under the home tutelage of governess Marion Crawford, who had joined the household in 1931 and emphasized a curriculum of reading, writing, arithmetic, history, French, singing, dancing, and Bible studies tailored to royal daughters rather than formal schooling. Unlike many contemporaries from aristocratic families who increasingly attended schools by the 1940s, Margaret received no institutional education, fostering a homeschool environment that prioritized deportment and cultural accomplishments over advanced academics.[15] This sheltered academic approach, supplemented by occasional interactions with local children encouraged by their mother to build social resilience amid the war's psychological strains, later contributed to Margaret's expressed regrets over her comparative lack of rigorous preparation.[16][17] To bolster public morale and raise funds for wartime charities like the Royal Household Wool Fund, Margaret joined Elizabeth in staging annual Christmas pantomimes at Windsor from 1941 to 1944, performing in productions including Cinderella (1941), Sleeping Beauty (1942), Aladdin (1943), and Old Mother Red Riding Boots (1944).[18] These amateur theatricals, involving castle staff and evacuees, provided diversion from rationed privations—such as limited meat, sugar, and petrol—while highlighting the princesses' roles in national solidarity efforts, though their privileged setting underscored the disparities between royal indulgences and civilian hardships.[19][20] The experiences reinforced a sense of duty but also an entitlement derived from contrasts between enforced austerities and the monarchy's enduring opulence, shaping Margaret's formative worldview.[12]Post-War Youth and Social Circle
The Margaret Set and Cultural Influences
Following the end of World War II, Princess Margaret, in her late teens and early twenties, cultivated a social circle dubbed the "Margaret Set" by the press, consisting of young aristocrats, artists, and intellectuals who embraced a bohemian lifestyle centered on London's nightlife. This group, emerging prominently in the late 1940s, included figures such as Johnny Dalkeith (later the 9th Duke of Buccleuch) and emphasized artistic and social pursuits that diverged from the disciplined expectations of royal duty during Britain's economic recovery.[21] The Set's activities often involved extended evenings at exclusive venues like the 400 Club—a dimly lit basement nightclub described as a prime after-hours destination for the elite—the Café de Paris, and the Mirabelle restaurant, where members danced until dawn amid champagne and conversation. These gatherings promoted a hedonistic ethos of indulgence in alcohol and late-night socializing, which stood in stark contrast to the rationing and hardships facing the broader population, fostering an environment that prioritized personal gratification over public service or restraint.[21][22] Cultural influences within the Set drew from avant-garde theater and sophisticated entertainers, including Noël Coward, whose plays and persona exemplified witty rebellion and glamour; Margaret's association with such figures signaled a deliberate shift toward cosmopolitan excess, potentially cultivating habits of indiscipline that echoed Coward's own blend of artistry and indulgence. Attendance at these events and emulation of their irreverent style represented a youthful defiance of post-war austerity, though empirical accounts of repeated all-night parties highlight how this immersion in elite frivolity may have undermined the sobriety required for her royal role.[23][21]Early Romantic Interests and Press Attention
As Princess Margaret transitioned into adulthood in the late 1940s, her entry into high society drew immediate and intense press fascination, with media outlets chronicling her appearances at debutante balls and fashionable gatherings.[24] Her vivacious demeanor and preference for lively nightlife led to her being dubbed the "party princess" by reporters, who highlighted her enthusiasm for dancing, theater, and social events over more restrained royal pursuits.[6] This coverage often portrayed her as seeking glamour and excitement, contrasting with expectations of suitable aristocratic matches that might have ensured institutional stability.[25] The press amplified scrutiny by speculating that nearly every male escort was a serious romantic prospect, fueling rumors of fleeting liaisons and potential engagements from 1947 onward.[26] Figures such as socialite Billy Wallace, a close friend whose association with Margaret in the early 1950s sparked open speculation about deeper ties, and David Ogilvy (later 13th Earl of Airlie), frequently seen accompanying her to nightclubs and events around 1951, were among those linked to her in tabloids.[27][24] These connections remained short-lived and non-committal, underscoring Margaret's agency in defying conventions that favored arranged unions with peers like Ogilvy over transient allure.[24] Such media hype not only heightened public expectations for a suitable match but also pressured the young princess, whose choices consistently favored personal enjoyment and charismatic company, setting a pattern of prioritizing immediate appeal over long-term dynastic considerations.[26] By 1952, this pre-Townsend phase of romantic intrigue had established Margaret as a figure of both admiration and controversy, with the press's role in magnifying minor associations contributing to an environment of relentless observation.[6]Romance with Peter Townsend
Origins and Development
Princess Margaret first encountered Group Captain Peter Townsend in 1947 during a royal tour of South Africa, where he served as an equerry to her father, King George VI.[28][29] At the time, Margaret was 16 years old, while Townsend, a decorated Royal Air Force officer and Battle of Britain veteran, was 32, married with two young sons from his 1941 union to Rosemary Pratt, daughter of the 5th Marquess of Camden.[30] Their initial interactions were professional, yet mutual admiration emerged from Townsend's poised demeanor and Margaret's youthful vivacity amid the tour's demands.[31] The relationship evolved privately following Queen Elizabeth II's accession in February 1952, as Townsend continued in royal service and their encounters at Buckingham Palace and Clarence House grew more frequent.[29] Margaret reportedly viewed Townsend as an ideal partner—charming, worldly, and sharing her appreciation for post-war cultural shifts—despite his lower social standing and responsibilities as a father.[30] Private correspondence and discreet meetings fostered emotional intimacy, rooted in Townsend's war heroism resonating with Margaret's wartime memories of family resilience, though this overlooked precedents like the abdication crisis of Edward VIII over a divorced American.[28][32] Townsend's divorce, finalized in November 1952 after his wife's admitted affair, introduced immediate constitutional tensions, as marriage to a divorcee conflicted with the Church of England's stance on indissoluble unions and royal tradition.[30][33] Yet, the attraction persisted through shared discretion, with Margaret prioritizing personal compatibility over institutional barriers in these early stages, reflecting a tension between individual affinity and hereditary constraints.[34][35]Proposal, Religious, and Constitutional Obstacles
In April 1953, shortly after the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, Peter Townsend proposed marriage to Princess Margaret, who accepted.[28][29] This development immediately encountered religious barriers rooted in the doctrine of the Church of England, of which the monarch served as Supreme Governor. Townsend had divorced his first wife, Rosemary Pratt, in 1952, with their separation dating to 1946 and two sons from the union; Church canons at the time prohibited the remarriage in church of any divorced person whose former spouse remained alive, viewing such unions as adulterous under biblical interpretations like Matthew 19:9.[36][37][32] Approving the marriage would have compelled the Queen to authorize a civil ceremony or contradict ecclesiastical authority, risking schism or public division within the established church, as precedents like the 1936 abdication of Edward VIII had already strained relations between crown and faith.[36][34] Constitutional hurdles compounded these issues under the Royal Marriages Act 1772, which mandated the sovereign's consent—via privy council approval—for marriages involving descendants of George II who were under 25, a threshold Margaret reached only in August 1955.[36][37] At 22 during the proposal, she required Elizabeth's permission, which carried implications for parliamentary sovereignty and monarchical stability; bypassing it without renouncing succession rights or place in the line of succession (then third after the Queen's heirs) evoked fears of an abdication-style crisis, albeit on a lesser scale than 1936, given Margaret's non-heir status post-Elizabeth's accession.[32][36] Government figures, including Prime Minister Winston Churchill initially and later Anthony Eden, resisted on grounds of precedent and Commonwealth cohesion, insisting any union demanded forfeiture of royal privileges to avoid eroding the crown's symbolic purity against divorce.[36] A 1955 compromise proposal allowed retention of title and civil list funding upon parliamentary assent, but it hinged on resolving the Church's veto, underscoring causal tensions between statutory law and ecclesiastical tradition.[36][38] Empirical indicators of public sentiment contrasted with elite opposition, as surveys reflected broader societal shifts toward tolerating divorce post-World War II, yet institutional guardians prioritized historical precedents over popular will to preserve the monarchy's role as a causal anchor of national continuity.[36] While specific contemporaneous polls varied, retrospective analyses indicate majority British approval for the match by 1955, driven by sympathy for Margaret's position amid evolving norms, though this did not sway privy council or cabinet deliberations, which emphasized long-term risks to constitutional order over transient opinion.[39][40] Such resistance aligned with royal history, where unions defying divorce taboos—like those of George IV or Edward VIII—had precipitated political upheavals, reinforcing elite calculus that tradition's endurance outweighed individual claims.[32]Public Scrutiny and Termination
In the summer of 1955, public and media attention on Princess Margaret's relationship with Peter Townsend intensified, with widespread speculation about a potential marriage despite opposition from the Church of England, Prime Minister Anthony Eden's government, and constitutional constraints under the Royal Marriages Act 1772.[30][36] A poll conducted by the Daily Mirror in July 1955 asked readers whether Margaret should be allowed to wed Townsend; of 70,142 responses, 67,907 supported the union, reflecting strong popular sentiment in favor, while only 2,235 opposed it.[41] This contrasted sharply with establishment views prioritizing ecclesiastical doctrine on the indissolubility of marriage and the monarchy's role as the Church's defender, underscoring a divide between public opinion and institutional resistance.[42] Townsend, who had been posted to Brussels as air attaché in 1953 to facilitate separation from Margaret, returned to London in October 1955 for discussions, during which the couple met privately multiple times.[43][44] On October 31, 1955, Margaret issued a public statement announcing her decision not to marry him, declaring: "I have been aware that, subject to my renouncing my rights of succession, it might have been possible for me to contract a civil marriage... But mindful of the Church's teachings that Christian marriage is indissoluble, and conscious of my duty to the Commonwealth, I have resolved to put my duty before my personal happiness."[45][28] This choice preserved her place in the line of succession and royal privileges but highlighted her subordination of personal fulfillment to the self-imposed constraints of her privileged position, as the alternative of renunciation would have entailed loss of title, income, and status.[30] The decision's aftermath revealed enduring emotional toll, with Margaret maintaining sporadic correspondence with Townsend but harboring resentment over the outcome, which she later viewed as a fortunate avoidance of an ordinary domestic life yet one that fueled lasting bitterness toward the institutional barriers—and possibly her sister Queen Elizabeth II—that enforced it.[46][47] Accounts from her associates, including former lady-in-waiting Lady Anne Glenconner, indicate this unresolved conflict contributed to a pattern of subsequent personal dissatisfaction and impulsive behavior, as Margaret grappled with the privileges that bound rather than liberated her.[46]Marriage and Family with Antony Armstrong-Jones
Courtship, Wedding, and Early Years
Princess Margaret met Antony Armstrong-Jones, a photographer known for his work in society and fashion circles, in 1958 through mutual friends including Lady Elizabeth Cavendish. Their courtship remained private amid Margaret's high-profile status, evolving into a romantic relationship that led to a secret engagement by early 1960. The engagement was publicly announced on 26 February 1960, just weeks after the news broke via a press photographer staking out Buckingham Palace, marking the first royal marriage to a commoner in over 400 years and generating widespread media interest.[48][49] The wedding occurred on 6 May 1960 at Westminster Abbey, with approximately 2,000 guests in attendance and an estimated 300,000 spectators lining the streets; it was the first British royal wedding broadcast live on television, viewed by millions. Queen Elizabeth II elevated Armstrong-Jones to the peerage as Earl of Snowdon and Viscount Linley immediately before the ceremony, granting Margaret the title Countess of Snowdon. The event symbolized a modernizing shift for the monarchy, receiving broad public approval for its romantic and egalitarian tone, though the rushed timeline—from announcement to vows in under three months—reflected the couple's desire for privacy amid intensifying press scrutiny.[50][51] After the wedding, Margaret and Snowdon departed for a six-week honeymoon aboard the royal yacht Britannia, cruising through the Caribbean and visiting destinations including Dominica, Antigua, and Mustique. The trip, shrouded in secrecy with limited press access, allowed the newlyweds initial seclusion. Early marital years showed apparent harmony, bonded by mutual artistic pursuits—Snowdon's photographic expertise aligning with Margaret's longstanding interests in ballet, music, and the visual arts—fostering a shared bohemian sensibility that contrasted with traditional royal expectations. Rumors of Snowdon's bisexuality, stemming from his pre-marriage relationships in London's creative underworld, persisted in elite circles but remained concealed from public view, not derailing the initial perception of compatibility.[52][53][7]Children and Domestic Life
Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-Jones welcomed their first child, David Albert Charles Armstrong-Jones (later Viscount Linley and 2nd Earl of Snowdon), on 3 November 1961 at Clarence House in London.[54] Their daughter, Lady Sarah Frances Elizabeth Armstrong-Jones (later Chatto), followed on 1 May 1964 at Kensington Palace.[55] These births marked the formation of the Snowdon family unit, with the couple establishing their primary residence in Apartment 1A at Kensington Palace, a multi-story, 20-room apartment designed to blend formal royal living with private family space.[56] Domestic life centered on this London base, supplemented by occasional retreats to countryside properties, though Kensington Palace remained the hub for raising the children amid Margaret's royal engagements.[57] Parenting followed longstanding royal conventions, with nannies handling routine childcare—such as the family's Nanny Sumner—allowing Margaret and Snowdon to prioritize public duties and personal pursuits.[58] Margaret, described in accounts as a natural mother despite these arrangements, encouraged her children's artistic interests, fostering independence and discouraging exploitation of their royal connections.[59] [60] Underlying family dynamics reflected tensions between Margaret's obligations as a working royal—often requiring extended absences—and private frustrations stemming from her secondary status to Queen Elizabeth II, which strained early marital harmony and contributed to a sense of detachment in home life.[58] The children later recalled an environment shaped by parental incompatibilities, with David Armstrong-Jones noting the challenges of his parents' differing temperaments in reflections on their union.[61] This generational pattern of structured yet emotionally reserved upbringing echoed Margaret's own childhood experiences under similar custodial systems.[62]Infidelities, Strains, and Divorce
Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon's marriage, initially marked by public glamour, began to fracture in the mid-1960s amid mutual infidelities that reflected personal choices prioritizing personal gratification over commitment. Rumors of extramarital liaisons on both sides surfaced as early as 1967, eroding the relational foundation through repeated breaches of trust and emotional detachment.[63] These actions, rather than any superficial incompatibility, causally undermined the partnership, as the couple's pursuit of external romantic pursuits fostered resentment and incompatibility over time. Lord Snowdon's affair with Lucy Lindsay-Hogg, a film production assistant, reportedly commenced around 1972, intensifying the strains during a period when the couple's public appearances masked private discord.[51] Margaret, in turn, engaged in her own relationships, contributing to a cycle of betrayal that biographers attribute to the couple's temperamental volatility and unwillingness to prioritize marital fidelity.[64] Vicious arguments and mutual accusations became commonplace, with the infidelities serving as symptoms of deeper irresponsibility in sustaining the vows exchanged in 1960. The accumulating tensions culminated in a formal separation announced by Buckingham Palace on March 19, 1976, after the couple had lived apart for some time, citing irreconcilable differences rooted in their irreparable rift.[4] Divorce proceedings followed, with the decree absolute granted on July 11, 1978, marking the first such dissolution for a senior member of the British royal family since the Tudor era over 400 years prior.[65] Public perception shifted, with initial sympathy giving way to criticism over the personal failings that burdened taxpayers with associated costs and diminished the monarchy's image of stability.[66]Later Personal Scandals and Relationships
Affair with Roddy Llewellyn
Princess Margaret first encountered Roderic Arthur Llewellyn, known as Roddy, on 3 September 1973 at the Café Royal in Edinburgh, Scotland, during a gathering organized by mutual friends including Colin Tennant, Lord Glenconner.[67] [68] Llewellyn, then 25 and a landscape gardener from a Welsh baronial family, maintained a reputation as a sociable playboy with interests in music and horticulture; Margaret, aged 43, initiated a romantic liaison that persisted intermittently for eight years despite the 17-year age difference.[69] [70] The affair gained public notoriety in early 1976 following paparazzi photographs taken during a February holiday on Mustique, Margaret's privately developed Caribbean estate, which captured the couple swimming and relaxing in swimsuits. [71] These images, published prominently in tabloids such as the News of the World in March, coincided with escalating marital tensions and directly preceded Buckingham Palace's announcement of Margaret's separation from Antony Armstrong-Jones, Lord Snowdon, on 19 March 1976. The exposure highlighted Llewellyn's status as a non-royal companion, amplifying media narratives of royal impropriety amid economic strains and shifting social norms in 1970s Britain. This scandal hastened public disillusionment with Margaret and, by extension, the monarchy, as coverage framed the relationship as emblematic of aristocratic detachment and personal indulgence.[72] Llewellyn's playboy image and the couple's lavish Mustique retreats—facilitated by Margaret's access to the island, originally gifted by Tennant—intensified criticisms of taxpayer-funded privileges supporting such liaisons, eroding sympathy for Margaret's position post-Townsend and divorce proceedings.[70] [73] While exact polling data on Margaret's favorability remains sparse, contemporaneous accounts and royal insiders noted heightened concerns over reputational damage to the institution, reflecting a broader causal link between visible royal scandals and waning deference in an era of republican sentiments.[73]Additional Controversies and Lifestyle Excesses
Princess Margaret faced persistent allegations of involvement in drug use amid her social excesses. A 2002 biography claimed she snorted cocaine in the Rolling Stones' dressing room and smoked marijuana during the 1960s and 1970s, assertions that drew immediate denial and fury from her family as unsubstantiated gossip.[74] Separate reports described packets of illicit substances left openly in her Kensington Palace bedroom during her marriage to Lord Snowdon, reflecting a household environment tolerant of such habits despite her royal position.[75] Her private gatherings, especially on Mustique in the 1960s through 1980s, devolved into notorious bacchanals featuring heavy drinking, nudity, and rumored free love, with Margaret at the center—described by associates as akin to "an Ibiza hen party" blending royal decorum with unchecked hedonism.[76] [77] One 1970s incident involved her hosting actor John Bindon at her Caribbean residence for three weeks, where their alleged affair included his performance of lewd party tricks, such as balancing beer glasses on his penis, behaviors that underscored the unchecked license of her circle.[78] Margaret's interactions with non-royals often revealed patterns of entitlement and disdain. Biographies and eyewitness accounts portray her as demanding toward staff, expecting deference without reciprocity, and snobbish in dismissing commoners; for instance, at a 1967 dinner party, she ignored model Twiggy for hours before curtly asking, "Who are you?" upon finally acknowledging her.[79] [80] She routinely extended social events into the early morning, persisting with smoking and drinking as guests grew fatigued and anxious, prioritizing her whims over others' comfort—a trait multiple contemporaries labeled as rude and self-absorbed.[81] These self-inflicted episodes, frequently leaked to tabloids for publicity or profit, contrasted sharply with the restraint of more dutiful royals, amplifying perceptions of her as exploiting privilege without accountability.[82]Public Duties and Engagements
Charitable Work and Patronages
Princess Margaret served as president or patron of over 80 organizations, with primary interests in welfare charities, music, and ballet.[83][84] In 1953, at age 23, she became president of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), a role she held for nearly 50 years, attending hundreds of related events to support efforts against child abuse.[85][86] She was appointed the first president of the Royal Ballet in 1957, while Queen Elizabeth II served as patron, and also held the presidency of the Royal Ballet School from 1956 until her death in 2002; her daughter, Lady Sarah Chatto, later became vice-president.[87][88] Additional patronages included the Girl Guides, Northern Ballet Theatre, and West Indies Olympic Association, reflecting her commitments across youth welfare, performing arts, and international sports development.[5]Official Tours and Representations
Princess Margaret undertook numerous official overseas tours on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II, spanning the 1950s to the 1970s, to strengthen diplomatic relations and promote British interests abroad. These visits included representations at key Commonwealth events, such as independence ceremonies in Jamaica in 1962 and Tuvalu in 1978, where she symbolized continuity of ties with newly sovereign nations.[5] Her 1958 tour of the West Indies, covering territories like Trinidad, Tobago, and British Guiana, involved inaugurating infrastructure projects including new hospitals and roads, while opening the West Indies Federation's parliament, thereby reinforcing colonial-era bonds amid decolonization.[89][90] In 1965, accompanied by Lord Snowdon, Margaret conducted a high-profile coast-to-coast tour of the United States, commencing on November 4 in California and extending to cities including San Francisco, Tucson, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and New York. The itinerary featured engagements with political leaders, such as a White House meeting with President Lyndon B. Johnson on November 17, and cultural figures in Hollywood, enhancing Britain's soft power through her personal charisma and media appeal.[91][92][93] These diplomatic missions, alongside domestic representations like hosting receptions for foreign dignitaries, contributed to fostering Commonwealth cohesion by projecting royal accessibility and goodwill. Official dispatches from the era highlighted the value of her charm in building rapport, as seen in enthusiastic receptions during Caribbean visits that bolstered public affinity for the monarchy.[7][94]Criticisms of Commitment and Effectiveness
Princess Margaret faced scrutiny for perceived shortcomings in fulfilling her public duties, with her annual engagements reportedly declining after her 1978 separation from Lord Snowdon. Prior to the separation, she undertook approximately 150 public appearances per year, but this fell to 97 in 1976 and 86 in 1977, with only eight recorded by Easter 1978.[95] Critics highlighted this reduced activity as inadequate given her status as a senior royal and recipient of over £100,000 annually from the parliamentary Civil List to support official functions.[95] Contemporary media and political figures accused her of laziness and decadence, portraying her as prioritizing personal leisure over royal obligations. In the 1960s and 1970s, British press outlets labeled her lifestyle as undermining the monarchy's moral authority, with reports decrying her "playgirl" persona amid frequent social outings and vacations, such as an extended pre-Easter trip to the Caribbean in 1978 with Roddy Llewellyn.[96] Labour MPs, including Dennis Canavan—who initially termed her a "parasite" on public funds (later withdrawing the remark)—and Sidney Bidwell, who called her an "embarrassment to the nation," pushed to reduce her allowance, arguing it subsidized minimal output.[95] Columnist Peregrine Worsthorne and Bishop Graham Leonard echoed these sentiments, suggesting her private conduct reflected a "sad lack of decorum" incompatible with public role expectations.[95] Instances of canceled engagements fueled further debate, often linked by press to her late-night socializing rather than verified health issues in earlier years. During her 1965 tour of the United States, multiple events were postponed, with newspapers attributing them to "royal hangovers" from evening excesses.[97] Later biographies noted frequent cancellations citing ill-health, though skeptics contended these masked an entitlement bred by royal privilege, contrasting her output with more diligent family members.[98] Supporters countered that underlying health constraints, evident by the 1990s, justified reduced participation, yet critics maintained her earlier patterns indicated a voluntary disengagement disproportionate to any medical necessity.[7] By the 1990s, such critiques intensified amid broader scrutiny of royal expenditures, including reports of £7,200 in taxpayer-funded clothing for a single 1995 week-long trip to San Francisco, versus her diminishing visible contributions.[99]Health, Habits, and Decline
Smoking, Drinking, and Extravagant Habits
Princess Margaret was a lifelong heavy smoker, consuming up to 60 strong Chesterfield cigarettes daily by the 1990s, often chain-smoking between courses during meals.[100][101] This persisted despite her father King George VI's death from lung cancer in 1952, with reports indicating she smoked 50 to 60 cigarettes per day even afterward.[102] Temporary reductions occurred, such as to 30 cigarettes daily following medical advice in the 1980s, but she resumed higher levels post-recovery.[103] Her drinking habits were equally excessive, centered on whisky—particularly Famous Grouse—mixed with water, forming a staple of her routine from morning onward.[104][105] Eyewitness accounts noted slurred speech in her later years, attributable to alcohol intake during social engagements, with friends observing her refusal of non-preferred brands and heavy consumption at gatherings.[106] These patterns aligned with broader reports of alcoholism, manifesting in visible impairment that contrasted sharply with the disciplined restraint exhibited by her sister, Queen Elizabeth II, who limited indulgences to maintain public composure. Margaret's extravagance underscored a rejection of fiscal moderation, exemplified by her commissioning of Les Jolies Eaux villa on Mustique in 1960, designed by Oliver Messel at considerable personal cost for a private retreat amid Britain's post-war austerity.[107] Renovations and upkeep escalated expenses, with the property later reflecting her penchant for lavish island parties involving jewels and high-society excess, including a 1959 purchase of the Poltimore tiara for £5,500 (equivalent to approximately £128,800 in 2024 terms).[108] Such spending on six-week honeymoons, gemstone collections, and hosted revelries prioritized sensory gratification over restraint, empirically correlating with relational and personal instability as resources dwindled against fixed royal allowances.[109] This indulgence-driven lifestyle, devoid of self-imposed limits, causally eroded her vitality through compounded physiological strain from nicotine, ethanol, and caloric overextension.Medical Issues and Final Years
In the 1980s, Princess Margaret experienced significant health challenges attributable to decades of heavy tobacco use. In January 1985, at age 54, she underwent surgery at Brompton Hospital in London to remove a portion of her left lung, a procedure linked by medical observers to her prolonged smoking habit, which reportedly reached up to 60 cigarettes daily in earlier years.[110][111][100] She had also suffered recurrent hepatitis, with an episode in 1984 exacerbating her vulnerabilities.[103] By the 1990s, her condition worsened, with physicians attributing cardiovascular complications to cumulative effects of over 50 years of smoking and excessive alcohol consumption. In 1993, she required hospitalization for pneumonia, a respiratory affliction consistent with prior lung damage.[112] Her first documented stroke occurred in February 1998 while vacationing in Mustique, marking the onset of progressive neurological decline; subsequent strokes followed, rendering her wheelchair-bound by the late 1990s.[113][112][100] In her final years, confined to apartments at Kensington Palace, Margaret exhibited increasing isolation and irascibility toward staff, with accounts describing outbursts that reduced servants to tears amid her physical frailty.[114] Royal physicians had repeatedly urged her to cease smoking, citing familial precedents of tobacco-related deaths among relatives, yet the entrenched habits precipitated irreversible vascular failures.[115][100]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Illness Leading to Death
On 9 February 2002, Princess Margaret, aged 71, suffered her third stroke, which precipitated her death later that day at King Edward VII's Hospital in London.[116] This final cerebrovascular event followed a stroke in March 2001 that had caused paralysis on her left side, significantly impairing her mobility and requiring ongoing care.[117] Admitted to the hospital amid the acute episode, she developed cardiac problems overnight, leading to her passing peacefully in her sleep at 6:30 a.m.[118] Her children, David Armstrong-Jones and Sarah Chatto, were present at her bedside during her final hours.[119] The absence of reported invasive interventions reflects a conservative approach consistent with her advanced frailty and prior debility, prioritizing comfort over prolongation in line with observed protocols for elderly royals facing terminal decline.[116]Funeral and Family Response
Princess Margaret's funeral took place on 15 February 2002 at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, as a private ceremony without public procession or lying in state, consistent with her non-reigning status and the royal family's decision to limit visibility amid her diminished public role.[120][121] The service, attended by approximately 450-500 family members, friends, and staff, included her two children—David Armstrong-Jones, Viscount Linley, and Lady Sarah Chatto—her former husband Antony Armstrong-Jones, the Queen, the Prince of Wales, and a frail Queen Mother transported by wheelchair; the coffin arrived from Kensington Palace via hearse.[122][123] Following the Anglican service, which Margaret had personally planned to emphasize simplicity and her musical preferences, her body was cremated at Slough Crematorium, breaking with the tradition of burial for senior royals in living memory due to limited space in the Royal Vault for full coffins alongside her parents.[121][124] Her ashes were subsequently interred temporarily in the Royal Vault beneath St George's Chapel beside her father, King George VI's coffin, with plans for later placement alongside both parents in the King George VI Memorial Chapel.[125][126] The royal family's immediate responses conveyed personal grief tempered by her long decline, with Queen Elizabeth II issuing a statement expressing "deep sorrow at the death of my beloved sister" and noting the close bond forged in childhood, while emphasizing shared mourning with the nation.[127] Prince Charles, in a televised address, described Margaret as "one of those remarkable women of her generation" who brought vitality to the family, recounting fond memories of her humor and piano playing, and extended thanks for public sympathy on behalf of the royals.[128][129] Public and press tributes echoed condolences from political leaders and charities but remained subdued, causally linked to her history of personal scandals and health struggles that had eroded widespread affection, resulting in minimal ceremonial pomp compared to reigning royals.[130][131]Legacy and Historical Assessment
Public Image and Personal Failures
Princess Margaret cultivated a public persona blending glamour and defiance, frequently dubbed the "rebel princess" for her extramarital affairs, love of nightlife, and resistance to traditional royal restraint, yet this image masked recurrent displays of entitlement and discourtesy toward others.[132][6] Contemporaries reported her dismissing fine wines as "like petrol" during hosted dinners and openly criticizing hosts' efforts, behaviors attributed not to egalitarian rebellion but to ingrained snobbery.[133] Such incidents, including her insistence on being addressed as "Ma'am Darling" by friends and staff, reinforced perceptions of her as spoiled and demanding rather than iconoclastic.[134][135] Her treatment of household staff exemplified self-inflicted reputational harm, with former employees recounting her using them as impromptu ashtrays during smoking sessions and issuing abrupt, belittling commands that provoked tears.[136][137] In one 1950s episode at Kensington Palace, she berated a maid so harshly that the worker wept, prompting Margaret to later self-deprecatingly call herself a "bad-tempered old devil" in apology, though biographers note such lapses reflected a broader pattern of inconsiderate demands rather than isolated remorse.[138][139] Insiders described a "slightly sadistic streak" in her interactions, where staff turnover was high due to her exacting standards, such as requiring bottled Malvern water exclusively, prioritizing personal whims over professional courtesy.[140] Recent biographical speculation, such as Meryle Secrest's 2025 book Princess Margaret and the Curse, posits fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) from her mother Queen Elizabeth's wartime drinking as an explanation for Margaret's volatility, framing it as an "invisible disability" inherited rather than chosen.[141][142] However, this theory lacks empirical evidence—no documented facial dysmorphology or confirmed prenatal exposure—and has been critiqued for pathologizing agency, effectively excusing accountability by recasting behavioral choices as biological inevitability, a narrative rejected by FASD advocacy groups who emphasize successful management without victimhood tropes.[143][144] While Margaret's patronage of arts institutions garnered some acclaim for cultural contributions, her personal failings—culminating in the 1978 divorce from Antony Armstrong-Jones amid tabloid exposure of her affair with Roddy Llewellyn—amplified public disillusionment, portraying her as emblematic of aristocratic irresponsibility rather than sympathetic nonconformity.[145][146] The scandal, which shocked 1970s Britain and embarrassed the monarchy, overshadowed prior goodwill, as polls and media commentary shifted from intrigue to judgment of her serial relational instability.[66][79] This erosion of trust stemmed directly from her decisions, debunking romanticized "tragic heroine" myths by evidencing deliberate prioritization of indulgence over duty.[147]Effects on the Monarchy and British Society
Princess Margaret's divorce from Antony Armstrong-Jones in 1978, following years of publicized marital discord and extramarital affairs, elicited widespread criticism that extended to the monarchy's institutional image. An Opinion Research Centre (ORC) poll conducted in April 1978 revealed that 73 percent of Britons believed her actions had damaged her standing as a royal family member, reflecting broader public disillusionment with perceived lapses in decorum among the Windsors.[148] This scandal, compounded by earlier controversies such as her 1950s renunciation of marriage to Peter Townsend, intensified media scrutiny of royal privileges, contributing to a narrative of elite detachment from post-war societal norms emphasizing duty and restraint.[149] The princess's lifestyle, marked by lavish expenditures and social indiscretions, coincided with declining monarchy approval ratings in the 1970s, a period of economic stagnation and rising egalitarian sentiments in Britain. While comprehensive longitudinal polls directly attributing dips to Margaret are sparse, her high-visibility failings—such as the 1976 public separation announcement that prompted accusations of neglecting royal duties—correlated with heightened republican discourse, as evidenced by contemporaneous critiques framing the Windsors as anachronistic amid meritocratic reforms in education, civil service, and industry.[150] Her case exemplified causal tensions between hereditary entitlement and emerging public expectations for accountability, subtly eroding the monarchy's aura of moral exemplarity without precipitating immediate abolitionist surges.[151] Financially, Margaret's receipt of Civil List allowances—totaling over £200,000 annually by the late 1970s, drawn from taxpayer funds—amplified perceptions of burdensome privilege, especially as her personal indulgences contrasted with national austerity measures. Upon her death in 2002, probate records disclosed an estate valued at £7.7 million, primarily inherited by her children David Armstrong-Jones and Sarah Chatto, after inheritance tax claims of nearly £3 million.[152][153] This legacy, accrued through royal perquisites and private investments, underscored ongoing debates on the monarchy's fiscal opacity and sustainability, reinforcing arguments that such unearned wealth strained public tolerance for hereditary institutions in a society increasingly oriented toward individual achievement.[154]Depictions in Media and Recent Reexaminations
Princess Margaret has been frequently depicted in television series such as The Crown, where she is portrayed across multiple seasons by actresses including Vanessa Kirby and Helena Bonham Carter, emphasizing her rebellious spirit, romantic entanglements, and personal tragedies, often framing her as a victim of royal constraints and familial dynamics.[155] These dramatizations, while drawing on historical events like her affair with Peter Townsend and marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones, have been criticized for romanticizing her volatility and alcohol-influenced behavior, with contemporaries such as Lady Anne Glenconner, her former lady-in-waiting, describing the portrayal as "disappointing" and insufficiently capturing her fun-loving yet non-touchy-feely nature.[156] Such fictionalized accounts prioritize emotional spectacle over empirical accounts of her entitlement and social lapses, as evidenced by anecdotal reports of rudeness toward staff and snobbery toward non-royals.[157] Documentaries like the 2022 film Princess Margaret: A Fine Romance present a more sympathetic lens, centering her lifelong quest for love amid scandals and heartbreak, including her renunciation of Townsend and turbulent marriage, while highlighting an idyllic early childhood overshadowed by royal expectations.[158] This narrative aligns with broader media tendencies to emphasize pathos in her story, yet contrasts with critical biographies that underscore causal factors like unchecked privilege rather than inevitable tragedy; for instance, Craig Brown's 2017 Ma'am Darling: 99 Glimpses of Princess Margaret compiles vignettes from eyewitnesses revealing habitual boorishness, such as berating servants or dismissing artists, portraying her less as a stifled romantic and more as a product of deferred-to whimsy that eroded personal discipline.[157] Brown's approach, grounded in direct testimonies, challenges sympathetic revisions by attributing her decline to behavioral choices over systemic victimhood, a view echoed in right-leaning analyses stressing the necessity of duty-bound restraint in monarchy.[159] In 21st-century reexaminations, particularly post-2020 works, attempts to pathologize Margaret's flaws have gained traction but faced empirical scrutiny. Meryle Secrest's 2025 biography Princess Margaret and the Curse: An Inquiry into a Royal Life posits fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) as explanatory for her mood swings, stunted growth, and learning difficulties, attributing it to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother's prenatal drinking and contrasting it with Elizabeth II's unaffected development; Secrest draws parallels to FASD pioneer Kenneth Jones's criteria, though acknowledging absent physical markers like a smooth philtrum.[141] This theory, released on International FASD Awareness Day (September 9, 2025), has been dismissed as speculative and "crazy" by critics, lacking verifiable medical evidence from Margaret's era and relying on retrospective behavioral inference over causal proof, with FASD advocacy groups cautioning against unproven royal attributions that risk stigmatizing the condition.[160][161] Left-leaning sympathies in such narratives seek compassionate reframing, yet truth-seeking assessments favor Brown's anecdote-driven critique, where personal agency and indulgence—rather than undiagnosed disability—better explain outcomes, as behaviors like chronic tardiness and relational volatility align with patterns of unaccountable elite upbringing, not isolated medical etiology.[157]Titles, Honours, and Heraldry
Titles and Styles
Upon her birth on 21 August 1930 at Glamis Castle, Scotland, she was styled Her Royal Highness Princess Margaret Rose of York, reflecting her status as the younger daughter of Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI), and Elizabeth, Duchess of York.[1][162] Following her father's accession to the throne as George VI on 11 December 1936, her style changed to Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, in accordance with the convention that daughters of a sovereign bear the title "The Princess [Christian name]" without a territorial designation.[1][163] This title persisted after her sister Elizabeth's accession as queen in 1952, with no alteration to her princess status or HRH prefix.[1] She married Antony Armstrong-Jones on 6 May 1960 at Westminster Abbey; he was subsequently created Earl of Snowdon and Viscount Linley on 6 October 1961, at which point her style became Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon.[1][164] The courtesy title of countess was used alongside her princely style in formal contexts, such as official documents and announcements.[1] The marriage was dissolved by divorce on 24 May 1978, after which she retained her style as Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, including the HRH prefix as a birthright not revoked upon marital dissolution.[1][165]| Period | Style |
|---|---|
| 21 August 1930 – 11 December 1936 | Her Royal Highness Princess Margaret of York[162] |
| 11 December 1936 – 6 October 1961 | Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret[1] |
| 6 October 1961 – 9 February 2002 | Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon[1][164] |
Honours, Awards, and Appointments
Princess Margaret was appointed to the Companion of the Order of the Crown of India (CI) on 12 June 1947, an honour reflecting her position within the British royal family at the time of India's impending independence.[1] She was invested as a Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) on 1 June 1953, coinciding with her sister Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, and later received the Royal Victorian Chain in 1990, both awards recognizing personal service to the sovereign but largely ceremonial for royals.[1] Additionally, she held the Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St John (GCStJ) from 1956, associated with her leadership in the St John Ambulance Brigade.[1] Foreign honours included the Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion in 1948, awarded during a state visit; the Order of the Brilliant Star of Zanzibar, First Class, in 1956; the Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown of Belgium in 1960; the Order of the Crown, Lion and Spear of the Toro Kingdom (Uganda) in 1965; and the Order of the Precious Crown, First Class (Japan), in 1971.[1] These decorations were typically bestowed on visiting royals as diplomatic courtesies rather than for individual merit. In military capacities, Margaret served as Colonel-in-Chief of several units, including the 15th/19th The King's Royal Hussars, The Royal Highland Fusiliers (Princess Margaret's Own Glasgow and Ayrshire Yeomanry), Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps, The Highland Fusiliers of Canada, The Princess Louise Fusiliers, The Royal Newfoundland Regiment, and The Bermuda Regiment; she was also Deputy Colonel-in-Chief of The Royal Anglian Regiment.[1] These roles were honorary, involving ceremonial duties such as presenting colours and attending inspections, without operational command. She further held positions as Grand President of the St John Ambulance Brigade, President of the Royal Ballet from 1957, and Commodore of the Sea Rangers from 1949, alongside honorary academic distinctions like Doctor of Music from the University of London in 1957.[1] Such appointments underscored her public role but were critiqued in some quarters as emblematic of royal privilege over substantive contribution.[1]Coat of Arms
Princess Margaret's coat of arms were granted to her in 1947 upon attaining the age of 17, comprising the royal arms of the United Kingdom—quarterly, first and fourth gules three lions passant guardant in pale or armed and langued azure (England), second or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counterflory gules (Scotland), third azure a harp or stringed argent (Ireland)—differenced by a label of three points argent, the outer points each charged with a Tudor rose proper and the central point with a thistle slipped and leaved proper.[167][168] The Tudor roses symbolized her names Margaret and Rose, while the thistle honored her birth at Glamis Castle in Scotland, the first royal princess born there in over three centuries; this cadency mark distinguished her arms from those of her elder sister, Princess Elizabeth, who as heir presumptive bore the royal arms with an undifferenced label argent of three points prior to her 1952 accession.[167][169] Following her 1960 marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones, created 1st Earl of Snowdon, Margaret's arms were impaled in standard heraldic practice for married women with those of her husband: quarterly or and sable a lion rampant gules armed and langued azure, on a canton sable a cross or (for Armstrong-Jones, with the cross referencing his paternal ancestry). The full achievement, often displayed on a lozenge ensigned by a royal coronet, appeared on personal stationery, official seals, and correspondence, as well as in combined form during their marriage until separation in 1976.[170] After divorce in 1978, she reverted to her individual differenced royal arms.[171]Family
Issue
Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-Jones had two children. Their son, David Albert Charles Armstrong-Jones, was born on 3 November 1961 at Clarence House in London and succeeded his father as the 2nd Earl of Snowdon in 2017; he is a furniture designer who founded the bespoke firm David Linley Ltd. in 1985.[172][173] Their daughter, Lady Sarah Frances Elizabeth Chatto (née Armstrong-Jones), was born on 1 May 1964 at Kensington Palace and works as a painter, having trained at the Royal Academy of Arts and exhibited her portraits.[174][175] David and Sarah together have four children, comprising Margaret's grandchildren: Samuel David Benedict Chatto (born 28 July 1996), Arthur Robert Nathaniel Chatto (born 5 February 1999), Charles Patrick Inigo Armstrong-Jones, Viscount Linley (born 1 July 1999), and Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones (born 14 May 2002).[176] None of Margaret's children or grandchildren hold the style of His or Her Royal Highness, as this designation was not extended beyond the immediate children of the sovereign and their heirs under the 1917 Letters Patent, with no subsequent grant made for this branch despite their proximity to the throne; this arrangement permitted greater personal autonomy from royal duties.[177][178]Ancestry
Princess Margaret was the younger daughter of King George VI (born Prince Albert, 14 December 1895 – 6 February 1952) and Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (4 August 1900 – 30 March 2002).[10] Her paternal line traces through the House of Windsor, renamed from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1917, descending from King George V (3 June 1865 – 20 January 1936), who succeeded Edward VII in 1910. George V's consort, Queen Mary (born Princess Victoria Mary of Teck, 26 May 1867 – 24 March 1953), originated from the House of Teck, a morganatic branch of Württemberg, and through her mother, Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge (1833–1897), connected to the House of Hanover as a granddaughter of George III.[179]| Relation | Paternal Ancestor | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|
| Grandfather | King George V | 1865–1936 |
| Grandmother | Queen Mary (Mary of Teck) | 1867–1953 |
| Great-grandfather | King Edward VII | 1841–1910 |
| Great-grandmother | Queen Alexandra (of Denmark) | 1844–1925 |
| Relation | Maternal Ancestor | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|
| Grandfather | Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore | 1855–1944 |
| Grandmother | Cecilia Nina Cavendish-Bentinck | 1862–1938 |
| Great-grandfather | Ernest Bowes-Lyon, 13th Earl of Strathmore | 1821–1891 |
| Great-grandmother | Lady Mildred COX (née Acheson) | 1827–1888 |
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