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  1. Katharine Frances Asquith (née Horner; 9 September 1885 – 9 July 1976) was an English landowner and patron of the arts. During the First World War, she served as a Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse. She was the wife of Raymond Asquith and the daughter-in-law of wartime prime minister H. H. Asquith.

    • Landowner
    • English
  2. In 1978, Asquith married the author and scholar Clare Pollen. The Earl and Countess of Oxford and Asquith have a son and four daughters. Mark Julian Asquith, Viscount Asquith (born 13 May 1979) Lady Magdalen Katharine Asquith (born 30 December 1981) Lady Frances Sophia Asquith (born 1984) Lady Celia Rose Asquith (born 1989)

    • Politician, diplomat
  3. Raymond Asquith was married on 25 July 1907 to Katharine Frances Horner (1885–1976), [14] [15] younger daughter [16] of Sir John Francis Fortescue Horner, of Mells, Somerset, descended from Thomas Horner, the Tudor figure on whom the nursery rhyme ' Little Jack Horner ' is sometimes said to be based. [17]

  4. 9 de jun. de 2015 · When they met at Katharine Asquith's in 1933, there was an instant affinity between them. During the war years he would travel down from his home on Katharine's estate ...

  5. 5 de abr. de 2024 · Katharine Frances Asquith (née Horner) (1885-1976), Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse and patron of the arts; daughter of Sir John and Lady Horner; wife of Raymond Asquith. Sitter in 10 portraits. Raymond Asquith (1878-1916), Scholar and army officer; son of Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith.

  6. Raymond Asquith was 37-years-old and left a wife, Katharine, and three young children. Margot Asquith would later say that had he lived “he would have made the world ring with his name”.

  7. 23 de jul. de 1987 · The Earl of Oxford and Asquith has remarked elsewhere that his own mother, Katharine Asquith, preserved almost a thousand of Russell’s letters. Georgiana Blakiston suggests that ‘the great loves of his life were for women who were not free to marry him, thereby furnishing protection from decisive action.’