Maud, Lady Hoare, Viscountess Templewood

Maud, Lady Hoare, Viscountess Templewood, DBE[1] (5 July 188227 December 1962), née Lady Maud Lygon, daughter of The 6th Earl Beauchamp, was the wife of Sir Samuel Hoare, and a DBE in her own right.

She married the then Samuel Hoare on 17 October 1909, four years before he succeeded to his father's baronetcy. Their marriage was childless. The following is from Time dated 28 February 1927: "Sir Samuel Hoare, British Air Minister, and Lady Maud returned to London, last week, from a 12,000-mile round trip flight inaugurating the London-Cairo-Delhi air service (TIME, Jan. 10). For this feat she was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE). She is the first woman ever to fly so many miles. There had been snow, rain, fog, sandstorms, but not a spare part was needed for the ship."

Lady Maud Hoare formally opened the newly expanded and improved London Croydon Airport on 2nd May 1928, Britain's main international airport at the time. [2]

Death

Viscountess Templewood, as she became known after the creation of her husband's peerage in 1944, was widowed in 1959 and died in 1962 aged 80.

Footnotes

  1. As the daughter of Frederick Lygon, 6th Earl Beauchamp, her own title took precedence over that of her husband until he was created a viscount.
  2. https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1928/1928%20-%200353.html?search=lady%20maud%20hoare

The half sister of Lord Beauchamp, who became an exile following the scandal caused by the Duke of westmenster.

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