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  1. When Lady Anne Spencer was born in 1623, in Great Brington, Northamptonshire, England, United Kingdom, her father, Sir William Spencer, was 32 and her mother, Lady Penelope Wriothesley, was 25. She married Henry Moore about 1645, in Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland. She died on 11 August 1672, at the age of 49.

  2. Anne Brydges/Tuchet/Touchet, Countess of Castlehaven, Lady of Chandos van Sudeley (born Spencer) was born on month day 1580, in birth place, to Ferdinando Stanley, 5th Earl of Derby and Alice Spencer, Countess of Derby, Baroness Ellesmere and Viscountess Egerton (born Spencer).

  3. Lady Anne Countess Dorset, (nee Spencer) Monteagle Compton Sackville Anne Spencer was the the fifth of the eight daughters and one of the thirteen children of Sir John Spencer (d.1586) of Althorp, Northamptonshire, and his wife, Katherine Kitson, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Kitson (1485–1540) of London.

  4. Anne Spencer was born Anne Bethel Scales Bannister on February 6, 1882, on a plantation in Henry County, Virginia, to former slaves, Joel Cephus Bannister and Sarah Louise Scales, the daughter of a slaveholder. Spencer’s parents separated in the late 1880s. Her mother supported the family by working as an itinerant cook.

  5. Lady Anne Wake-Walker just passed away last February 25, 2020 aged 99. Third Officer in the Women's Royal Naval Service; wife of Christopher Baldwin Hughes Wake-Walker; daughter of 7th Earl Spencer.

  6. Biography. Lady Anne Spencer was probably the third of six children and the eldest of the two daughters of Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland, and his second wife, Lady Anne Churchill; one of the daughters and co-heirs of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, and his wife, Sarah nee Jennings.

  7. Lady, Lady, I saw your hands, Twisted, awry, like crumpled roots, Bleached poor white in a sudsy tub, Wrinkled and drawn from your rub-a-dub. Lady, Lady, I saw your heart, And altared there in its darksome place. Were the tongues of flame the ancients knew, Where the good God sits to spangle through. Published in Survey Graphic, March 1925.