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Dame Margaret Lloyd George GBE JP ( née Owen; 4 November 1864 – 20 January 1941) was a Welsh humanitarian and one of the first seven women magistrates appointed in Britain in 1919. [1] . She was the wife of Prime Minister David Lloyd George from 1888 until her death in 1941. [2] Early life.
Born Margaret Owen in Mynyddednyfed, Wales; died in January 1941; daughter of a prosperous Methodist farmer; became first wife of David Lloyd George (1863–1945, British prime minister, and one of the most dominant international figures of the early 20th century), on January 24, 1888; children: (two sons and three daughters) Richard, Mair ...
The marriage was annulled, 1933. He married (2), 1935, Winifred Calve. He died 1 May 1968, after a long illness. He published, in 1947, Dame Margaret - the life story of my mother, a warm-hearted tribute to the memory of his mother, and in 1960, Lloyd George. MAIR ELUNED LLOYD GEORGE (1890 - 1907)
While Dame Margaret was in Cricieth, Lloyd George found companionship and comfort with Frances. In 1929 Frances had a daughter, Jennifer Mary. After a period of illness where she injured her hip following a fall, Dame Margaret Lloyd George died on the 20 January 1941.
David Lloyd George had utilized his Welshness to strengthen his position in British Liberalism, and then as Prime Minister during the First World War and its aftermath had established himself as a world statesman, although one who represented British interests. The Lloyd George name was Welsh and instantly recognizable.
- Paul Ward
- 2005
Lloyd George, Margaret (1866–1941)Welsh prime-ministerial wife. Name variations: Dame Margaret Lloyd George; Margaret Owen. Born Margaret Owen, 1866, in Mynyddednyfed, Wales; died Jan 1941; dau. Source for information on Lloyd George, Margaret (1866–1941): Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages dictionary.
The Campaigns of Margaret Lloyd George, published on 24 October – almost a century to the day after Lloyd George’s departure from 10 Downing Street at the hands of a vote at the now-labelled 1922 Committee – tells this unique story in the words of Margaret Lloyd George herself, and in the words of the press that followed her tours.