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  1. Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple. Amalia Mary Maud Cassel. Ruth Mary Clarisse Cholmondeley, Lady Delamere ( née Ashley, formerly Cunningham-Reid and Gardner; 22 July 1906 – 10 October 1986), was a British heiress and socialite.

  2. The Hon. (Ruth) Mary Clarisse Cholmondeley, Lady Delamere (née Ashley, formerly Cunningham-Reid and later Gardner) was born on 22nd July 1906, the youngest daughter of Lt-Col. The Rt Hon. Wilfrid William Ashley, 1st Lord Mount Temple (1867-1939) and Miss Amalia Mary Maud 'Maudie' Cassel (1879-1911). She was born whilst her mother was staying ...

  3. British socialite / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Ruth Mary Clarisse Cholmondeley, Lady Delamere ( née Ashley, formerly Cunningham-Reid and Gardner; 22 July 1906 – 10 October 1986), was a British heiress and socialite. A granddaughter of German-Jewish banker Sir Ernest Cassel, she inherited an estate including a large manor house in ...

  4. 12 de sept. de 2021 · Mary Cholmondeley, Lady Delamere's Timeline. Genealogy for Ruth Mary Clarisse Cholmondeley (Ashley), Baroness Delamere (1906 - 1986) family tree on Geni, with over 230 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  5. It was most recently cleaned and restored by the Tate in 1959, including restoration of areas of flaking paint. The painting was in the collection of Thomas Cholmondeley, the third son of Sir Hugh Cholmondeley and his wife Lady Mary Cholmondeley (née Holford), who was an ancestor of Baron Delamere.

  6. Mary Cholmondeley ( Hodnet, Shropshire, Inglaterra, 8 de junio de 1859 - Kensington, Londres, 15 de julio de 1925) fue una escritora británica . Biografía. Hija del vicario de la Iglesia de San Lucas en el pueblo de Hodnet, Mary Cholmondeley pasó la mayor parte de los primeros treinta años de su vida cuidando de su madre enferma.

  7. 16 de dic. de 2022 · Mary Cholmondeley (1859–1925) was an upper-class, New Woman writer whose reputation largely rests on her 1899 best-selling novel Red Pottage. Rendered slightly suspect to the county families in her native Shropshire by her literary ambitions, Cholmondeley also found it difficult to identify with the new generation of radically ...