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  1. Lady of the Bedchamber. Jane Spencer, Baroness Churchill VA ( née Conyngham; 1 June 1826 – 24 December 1900) was an English aristocrat and companion of Queen Victoria . From 1854 to her death, Churchill served as a Lady of the Bedchamber to Victoria; this made her the longest serving member of the queen's personal household.

  2. Raine Spencer, Countess Spencer (née McCorquodale; 9 September 1929 – 21 October 2016) was a British socialite and local politician. She was the daughter of Alexander McCorquodale and the romantic novelist and socialite Barbara Cartland and the stepmother of Diana, Princess of Wales .

  3. Elizabeth Herbert, Countess of Pembroke and Montgomery (1737–1831), who married Henry Herbert, 10th Earl of Pembroke, and had children. George Spencer, 4th Duke of Marlborough (1739–1817). Lord Charles Spencer (1740–1820), who married Hon. Mary Beauclerk, and had children. Lord Robert Spencer (1747–1831), who married Henrietta Bouverie.

  4. Earl of Sunderland, und dessen zweiter Gattin Lady Anne Churchill, der zweiten Tochter von John Churchill, 1. Duke of Marlborough. Er besuchte das Eton College. Als 1729 sein älterer Bruder Robert Spencer, 4. Earl of Sunderland, der den Vater 1722 beerbt hatte, kinderlos starb, erbte Charles die väterlichen Adelstitel als 5. Earl of ...

  5. Countess Spencer was appointed a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Elizabeth in 1937. She continued in the role after Elizabeth became Queen Mother in 1952, and remained in post until her death. [6] She was the grandmother of Diana, Princess of Wales. Lady Spencer died at the Spencers' ancestral home, Althorp, [7] of a brain tumour on 4 December ...

  6. Trinity College, Cambridge. Charles Robert Spencer, 6th Earl Spencer, KG, GCVO, VD, PC (30 October 1857 – 26 September 1922), styled The Honourable Charles Spencer until 1905 and known as Viscount Althorp between 1905 and 1910, was a British courtier and Liberal politician from the Spencer family. An MP from 1880 to 1895 and again from 1900 ...