Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Lady Pamela's funeral

 



The funeral is the same day as the Trooping the Colour.   The Church is St. Bartholomew's Church, the same church where India Hicks and David Flint Wood were married, but, contrary to several reports, it is not the church where India Hicks was baptized.  Her christening took place at St. Mary's Ewelme.

From India's Instagram account 


65 years ago - the wedding of the Duke of Kent and Katharine Worsley

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 The Duke of Kent and Katharine Worsley were married on June 8, 1961, at York Minster.   The Duke, 25, was the eldest son of the late Prince George, Duke of Kent, and Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark. Prince Edward was only 6 years old when his father died in an air crash while on active duty in August 1942.  

His bride, Katharine Lucy Worsley, two years his senior, was the youngest child of Sir William Worsley, 4th Bt.  The young duke was smitten with the Yorkshire-born lass, but his mother, determined to find him a royal bride, threw numerous obstacles in her son's way. She eventually agreed to the marriage.

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The reception was held at Hovingham Hall, owned by Sir William Worsley






Monday, June 8, 2026

The marriage of Lukas von Lattorff and Countess Marie von Wilczek

 

@Rumpler/Jeuter

Lukas von Lattorff and Countess Marie Magdalena von Wilczek were married on June 6 at the Pfarrkirche Stockerau, in Lower Austria, one month after their civil marriage on May 9th.  

The groom, 26, is the eldest of seven children of Philipp von Lattorff and HSH Princess Tatjana of Liechtenstein.   His new wife, also 26, is the youngest child of Count Hans-Christian von Wilczek and Katharina von Hartig.   

Lukas is the grandson of HSH Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein.  The von Lattorff family is untitled nobility.

The reception, held at the bride's home, Schloss Seebarn, was celebrated with family and close friends.

@Rumpler/Jeuter


Royal Musings was the first to report on their engagement in 2025.

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/08/a-noble-engagement-von-lattorff-von.html

Marie's brother's wedding:

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/07/the-marriage-of-count-johann-von.html

Peter and Harriet release two wedding photos

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The newly married Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips have shared two wedding photographs with the press.  The photographer is Mark Nicholson, and the copyright belongs to Peter and Harriet Phillips.

Both photos were taken at All Saints' Church in Kemble, Gloucestershire.

Peter, who is the son of the Princess Royal and Captain Mark Phillips, married Harriet Sperling (nee Sanders), an NHS nurse, on June 6. 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/06/presenting-mr-and-mrs-peter-phillips.html  

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/04/peter-phillips-and-harriet-sperling-set.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/08/harriet-said-yes.html  

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/06/peter-and-harriet-in-ascot-procession.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2024/07/peter-phillips-steps-out-with-harriet.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2024/05/peter-phillips-introduces-new.html





Princess Désirée's legacy

 

@Maja Suslin/TT


 Princess Désirée, Baroness Silfverschiöld, has left an inheritance worth $13,300,000, according to the Swedish newspaper Expressen.  The princess's estate included cash and securities, jewelry ($105,524), and an apartment in Santa Ponsa ($68,600).  Her late sister, Princess Birgitta, also lived in the same area.

The princess's inheritance will be shared by her two daughters, Baroness Christina Louise De Geer, 59, and Baroness Hélène Silfverschiöld, 57.  Her will excludes her eldest child, Baron Carl Silfverschiöld.  

Princess Désirée provided a statement in her will as Carl was "compensated well " in her husband's will, "regarding both his private property and the property he holds wth fiduciary rights."

Baron Niclas Silfverschiöld died in 2017.   Carl inherited his father's private fortune ($2,745,000) and the Koberg and Gåsevadsholm trust, which is worth $53 million.   After his death, Niclas's family trust was terminated and replaced with a limited liability company.  Baron Carl is the CEO of Kobergs och Gåsevadholms Fideikommiss AB and Koberg Förvaltning AB, which manages Koberg Castle and other properties.

After Baron Niclas's will was settled, his two daughters received a payout from the estate.

The Princess, who was the third sister of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, died on January 21st at the age of 87.

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/01/there-is-no-finer-person-princess.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/01/princess-desirees-wedding.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/02/princess-desirees-funeral.html



Sunday, June 7, 2026

A Wedding Observation


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The Princess Royal loves to go shopping in her closet, as she is often seen wearing an item of clothing, dress, sweater, or even a hat that she first wore decades earlier.    July 27, 1981 - she wore the hat at her daughter, Zara's, christening.


@Lichfield


The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh were accompanied by their son, Lord Wessex.   Their elder child, Lady Louise Windsor, was not present.  Perhaps she was working and could not get the day off.

Zara and Mike Tindall's two daughters, Mia and Lena, attended the wedding, but their little brother, Lucas, 5, remained at home.  Also missing from the wedding were Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis of Wales.  All three children are under the age of 13 -- and Lambrook School has Saturday School.

https://www.lambrookschool.co.uk/school-life/prep/

Although Lord Snowdon has attended events, including Royal Ascot and the Chelsea Flower Show, with Isabelle de la Bruyère, this is the first time she has attended a family event.  Will there be a new Countess of Snowdon in the not-too-distant future?


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 Here is a profile of Isabelle I wrote in 2024:

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2024/03/has-lord-snowdon-found-his-new-countess.html


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 Princess Margaret's grandson, ceramic artist Sam Chatto, brought his plus one, Eleanor Ekserdjian, to the wedding.  She was also with Sam on Christmas Day, joining other members of his family at church at Sandringham.

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2024/12/another-view-of-christmas-at-sandringham.html

So who will get the to altar first:  Uncle David or his nephew, Sam?

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Presenting Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips

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 There were plenty of smiles but no sunshine in Kemble, Gloucestershire, when the newly married Peter and Harriet Phillips emerged from All Saints' Church to a posse of reporters and photographers.

Peter Phillips is the elder child of the Princess Royal and her first husband, Mark Phillips. His new wife is Harriet Sperling, an NHS pediatric nurse.   They met several years earlier at a sporting event where their daughters were competing. Peter's two daughters, Savannah, 15, and Isla, 14, from his first marriage to Autumn Phillips,  and Harriet's 13-year-old daughter, Georgina, have been "good friends long before their parents caught each other's eye".  

Harriet and her first husband, Antonio St. John Sperling, were divorced when Georgina was about two years old.

The bride's "high-necked gown and full veil was designed by Emilia Wickstead, who also designed the bridesmaid gowns. Her attendants were her daughter, Georgina, and stepdaughters, Savannah and Isla.  

Harriet's father, Rupert Sanders, died in 2003. Her mother, Mary, and her three siblings, Nicholas, Louisa, and Rebecca, along with their families, were also at the wedding. It was Nicholas who escorted his sister down the aisle.

Harriet's ivory satin shoes were made by Jimmy Choo. Her Tiara was loaned by Mayfair jeweler, Pragnell. The jeweler also provided the earrings.

A description from the tiara.

"This intricate tiara dazzles the eye by showcasing a design typical of both the Edwardian and Deco periods - which is very rare in all jewellery. Diamonds highlight a festoon of glittering laurel leaves and articulated floral motifs, bearing great resemblance to the tiara owned by The Princess Royal, in the official photograph celebrating her fiftieth birthday in 2000.

Favoured as a bridal headpiece and owned by the Pragnell family, this delicate tiara has been worn by generations of Pragnell family members and was present at the Coronation of both King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II."

Her bouquet, designed by Millie Richardson, featured sweet peas, myrtle, and lily of the valley. It is known if the myrtle came from Osborne, where a sprig from Queen Victoria's bouquet was planted. Sprigs from descendants of the original myrtle have been used in royal bouquets for many years, 

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The guests included the King and Queen, the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, the Earl of Wessex, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, and their husbands,  Lord Snowdon and his girlfriend, Isabelle de la Bruyère, and his daughter, Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones,  Daniel and Lady Sarah Chatto, Sam Chatto and his girlfriend, Eleanor Ekserdjian, and the groom's half-sister, Stephanie and her husband, William Hosier.

A bespoke reception, planned by Bentley's Entertainment, was held at Gatcombe Park, where Princess Anne and Sir Timothy Laurence live. Both her children, Peter and Zara, and their families also have homes on the estate. Bentley's Entertainment was founded by Peregrine Armstrong-Jones,  the much younger half-brother of the late Antony, 1st Earl of Snowdon.

[Peregrine is 11 months older than his half-nephew, David, 2nd Earl of Snowdon.] 

The King and Queen did not attend the reception. After the service, they headed for an official engagement at the Epsom Derby.

The Longest Living Descendant of Queen Victoria.

@Royal Court



With the death of Lady Pamela Hicks, the torch of the longest-living descendant is passed to Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner.

The elder sister of King Harald V of Norway celebrated her 94th birthday on February 12th.


https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/05/update-on-princess-astrid.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/05/princess-astrid-back-in-hospital.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2026/03/princess-astrid-mrs-ferner-in-hospital.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/02/princess-astrid-celebrates-her-93rd.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2022/02/princess-astrid-of-norway-celebrates.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2017/02/princess-astrid-of-norway.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/01/princess-astrid-marries-divorced.html 




King Charles on Lady Pamela Hicks

 


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"His Majesty was greatly saddened to learn of the death of Lady Pamela Hicks, a sorrow tempered by the fondest memories and deepest gratitude for her long life and loyal service to Queen Elizabeth. 

"The King and Queen’s thoughts are with Lady Pamela’s family, as they mourn a woman whose warmth, wit, and perspicacity always made such an impression, and who will be so dearly missed by all those who knew and loved her."



Lady Pamela Hicks

 

@India Hicks


There was "nothing fierce" about the Lady Pamela Hicks, according to a Tatler profile of Pamela and her older sister, Patricia, Countess Mountbatten of Burma, who died at her home in Brightwell Baldwin, Oxfordshire, on June 5.  She was 97 years old.

Lady Pamela lived a life of privilege, which she never took for granted.  She was always interested in new places and embracing all that life has to offer. She may have been hesitant about writing her memoirs, but her younger daughter, India, coaxed her out of her comfort zone.   Her books offered great insight not only into her family life but also into her childhood friend, Queen Elizabeth II, and her first cousin, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

  Her death was announced by her youngest child,  India Hicks.  According to acclaimed royal biographer Hugo Vickers, Lady Pamela had "a curious late life fame."   

This was due to her two books, Daughter of Empire Life as a Mountbatten and India Remembered,  and India Hicks' Lady Pamela, which was subtitled "My Mother's  Extraordinary  Years as Daughter ot the Viceroy of India, Lady-in-Waiting to the Queen, and the Wife of David Hicks."

https://royalbooknews.blogspot.com/2026/06/lady-pamela-hicks-books.html

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 Lady Pamela Carmen Louise Mountbatten of Burma was born at the Ritz Hotel, Barcelona, Spain, on April 19, 1929, the second and youngest child of the late Louis, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, and the Hon. Edwina Ashley.  On her father's side, she was the granddaughter of Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine and Prince Louis of Battenberg, who was created Marquess of Milford Haven in 1917.   Victoria's mother, Princess Alice, was the third child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.   Prince Louis renounced his German titles, which meant his three younger children, Princess Louise, Prince George, and Prince Louis, would now have the styles of children of a Marquess.  Lady Louise, George, Earl of Medina, and Lord Louis Mountbatten.   

Their elder sister, Princess Alice, was not affected by the title change as she was married to Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark.  She had four daughters and a son, Prince Philip.  In 1923, Lady Louise became the second wife of King Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden.

Lord Louis was also a close friend of the Prince of Wales (David), the eldest son of King George V and Queen Mary, although he was unable to serve as the stable influence David needed.  Their relationship would be tested when the Prince of Wales fell in love with Wallis Simpson, leading David, as King Edward VIII, to abdicate to marry the woman he loved.

Louis, who rose to the highest positions in the Royal Navy, was not wealthy, however.  It was his wife, Edwina, who was the heiress.  She was the elder daughter of Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple, and Maud Cassel, the only child of the financier Sir Ernest Cassel.  As Maud died in 1911, Edwina and her sister, Mary, were the primary beneficiaries of their grandfather's will.


Lady Pamela's birth registration

Her parents were on a European road trip when Edwina went into premature labor in the Ritz Hotel in Barcelona.  Lord Louis, as he was styled at the time, asked the hospital for a doctor.  Unfortunately, the Ritz Hotel could only find an ear, nose, and throat specialist.   Louis then called his first cousin, Queen Ena of Spain, who was away.  Her husband, King Alfonso XIII, answered the telephone and was delighted to hear that Edwina was pregnant.  He promised not to tell anyone.  Lord Louis pleaded with him: "Tell everyone!" explaining the seriousness of the situation.   Within 30 minutes, the hotel was surrounded by the Royal Guard, and a doctor was secured.

Lady Pamela "arrived safely and was wrapped in a beautifully embroidered layette that had been brought by local nuns."

Her baptism took place in the Chapel Royal, St James's Palace, on July 12, 1929.  The Prince of Wales, the King of Spain, the Duke of Gloucester, and Prince George (later Duke of Kent) attended the service.   The King, Prince George, the Marchioness of Milford Haven,  Countess of Brecknock (maternal aunt), and the Duchess of Peñaranda were the godparents.

She was a first cousin of the late Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, who married the future Queen Elizabeth II in 1947. Lady Pamela noted that the young Elizabeth "clocked him" when she and her parents (and younger sister, Margaret) visited the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth in July 1939.  "She never  from that moment  thought of anybody else."

Prince Philip and the late Queen grew up in the same social circle that included his first cousins, Patricia, Pamela, and David, 3rd Marquess of Milford Haven, and Alex, Georgina, and Myra, the three children of Sir Harald and Lady Zia Wernher.  Lady Zia was the Marchioness of Milford Haven's sister.

In an interview earlier this year with The English Home, Lady Pamela talked about her childhood friends, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, after they moved to Buckingham Palace

"It was a big change but great fun for us children when the young princesses Elizabeth and Margaret moved to Buckingham Palace. I remember running along endless corridors and out into the beautiful gardens with their perfect lawns.

We played pretend gymkhanas with the red-jacketed footmen looking on."

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 Lady Pamela "adored" her father, but her relationship with her mother was more difficult.  In her memoir, Daughter of Empire,  she wrote about her mother: "I never liked her.  She had no idea how to play with children, unlike my father.  She was a woman who could never have a personal conversation with you, and who needed constant flattery."  She added, "As a child, I admired her for her glamour.  Then, when we were in India, and I saw the work she did there, especially with the Japanese prisoners of war, that admiration grew."

In October 1946, Pamela was the "head bridesmaid" at her sister's wedding to John, 7th Brabourne, who had served as her father's ADC.  The other three bridesmaids were Princesses Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alexandra. Prince Philip also attended the wedding: 

 The following year, Lord Mountbatten was appointed Viceroy of India, where his primary role was to assist with the partition of India into two countries: India and Pakistan.  Lady Pamela wrote about her time in India with her parents in India Remembered, which was published in 2007.

It was in India when Lady Pamela received a letter from Princess Elizabeth, asking her to be one of her bridesmaids.  She and her parents flew home ten days before the wedding.  The other bridesmaids had "several fittings" for their dresses, but Lady Pamela acknowledged she had only two.  The "expertise of the designer, Norman Hartnell, and his team, meant that the dress fitted perfectly."

Lady Pamela described the wedding as "like being part of a fairy tale."  

She discussed the frustrations that her cousin Philip faced. "He's so active and inventive, with such an inquiring mind, and yet at that stage, he was allowed to do nothing, absolutely nothing.  Lilibet was a lovely girl, very pretty, and they were in love, but the horror for him was that she would ultimately be Queen of England.  That put paid to his promising naval career.  What would he do for the rest of his life, always two steps behind?"

In February 1952, she joined Prince Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh on a Commonwealth Tour as a lady-in-waiting.  She was with them in the remote Treetops Hotel in the Aberdare National Park in Kenya when Elizabeth learned that her father had died and that Elizabeth was now the Queen.  "Because of where we were, we were almost the last people in the world to know." 

The hotel was accessible only by ladder. Lady Pamela wrote: "She goes up as a princess. The King dies that night. She comes down the ladder as a Queen."

In an interview with El País, she said she hugged the Queen, but then realized, "My God, she's the Queen now."  Lady Pamela "sank into a deep curtsey."

She also served as a lady-in-waiting during the 1953-1954 Commonwealth tour.

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 It was a party in 1959 where she was introduced to the "perfectionist" designer David Hicks.   "I fell madly in love with him," despite "the differences in their social stations and temperament." Some years later, she described her life with David as "eye-opening."  It was, "she said, "like living with a volcano. But my goodness, it was interesting.  We did exciting things and met so many amazing people."

Their wedding took place at Romsey Abbey on January 13, 1960.  The Duke of Edinburgh was accompanied by the Prince of Wales and Princess Anne, a bridesmaid for the first time.  Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, the Duchess of Gloucester, the Duchess of Kent, and Princess Alexandra, Prince and Princess Louis of Hesse and by Rhine, Prince and Princess Georg Wilhelm of Hanover, and Prince Andrej were among the guests.  

Queen Elizabeth was in the final trimester of her third pregnancy and did not attend.

 Lord Brabourne was his brother-in-law's best man. 

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 Lady Pamela's bridesmaids were Princess Frederica of Hanover, the Hon. Joanna Knatchull (the bride's niece), Princess Anne, Victoria Marten (Lady Pamela's goddaughter), and Princess Clarissa of Hesse.   Princess Frederica and Princess Clarissa were the children of Princess Georg Wilhelm of Hanover (nee Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark.

The reception was held at Broadlands, and a honeymoon in the West Indies.

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 It was after they returned from their honeymoon that Edwina learned her mother had died during her sleep on February 21, 1960, in Jesselton, North Borneo.  They arrived at the airport only to find Lord Brabourne at the bottom of the airplane's steps with the news that Lady Mountbatten had died.

The family settled into a new home, Britwell Manor, in Oxfordshire. They also owned a flat at the Albany on Piccadilly. 

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 Vacations were often spent at Lord Mountbatten's Irish estate, Classiebawn Castle.  

It was on August 27, 1979, when Lady Pamela's father was assassinated by the IRA, which had placed a bomb on Lord Mountbatten's fishing boat, Shadow V. The explosion killed Lord Mountbatten, his grandson, Hon. Nicholas Knatchbull, Doreen, Dowager Lady Brabourne, and Paul Maxwell, a local boy who often helped out on the boat.  Lord and Lady Brabourne and their son Timothy (Nicholas's twin) were seriously injured but survived.   

Lady Pamela was asked to identify her father's body, but found herself unable to do so.  She remained "forever indebted" to the Duke of Abercorn, a "dear friend," who identified Louis' remains.  The Duke was married to Lady Zia's eldest daughter, Sascha.

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 Some years later, Lady Pamela forgave the IRA, something her youngest child, India, found "inspirational."

Due to financial troubles, David Hicks was forced to sell Britwell, and the family moved to another home, the Grove in Brightwell Baldwin, Oxfordshire, where Lady Pamela lived for more than five decades.

"I’ve stayed here because I knew I would never be able to find anywhere nicer. My favourite room I think is the pink drawing room that he created for me - it is big enough to contain all the things I value most, collected throughout my life, and enjoy having around me," she told English Home magazine.

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In 2002, Lady Pamela sold her mother's diamond tiara at Sotheby's. At the time, she noted:" We’re not pop stars, so we need the money. I am sad to have to sell it as it belonged to my mother and it’s very precious to me. It has, however, come to the point where I have to sell something.”

India Hicks


David Hicks died on March 29, 1998, at the age of 69.

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In September 2022,  Lady Pamela attended Queen Elizabeth's funeral.  She was not invited, however, to King Charles III's Coronation. According to India, "My mother was not offended at all."

 In October 2026, she was "too frail" to attend her granddaughter Maddison's wedding to Canadian Bret Kapernov, although she invited the bride and her wedding party to get ready at her home.

She understood and accepted that her life "of undeniable privilege" came with "responsibility."     Lady Pamela said, "You got such satisfaction out of completing your duty and doing service.  These are two words you just don't hear anymore.  We've lost our sense of duty and service."

Her style at birth was Miss Pamela Mountbatten, as her father's status was the younger son of a Marquess.  In April 1946, she became the Hon. Pamela Mountbatten when her father was created Viscount Mountbatten by George VI for his distinguished service as the Supreme Allied Commander in South East Asia during the Second World War.  The following year, Louis was created Earl Mountbatten of Burma, which meant that Pamela was now styled as Lady Pamela Mountbatten. The Mountbatten earldom has a special remainder which allowed for the succession of his two daughters and their male heirs.

Lady Pamela is survived by her three children, Edwina, Ashley, and India,  eleven grandchildren, Maddison, Jordan, and Rowan Brudenell,  Angelica, Ambrosia, Caspian, and Horatio Hicks,  Felix, Amory, Conrad, and Domino Flint Wood, and four great-grandchildren:  Daphne, Phebe, and Moses Modupe-Ojo and Michael Kapetanov.

After her 97th birthday celebrations in April, her daughter, India Hicks, wrote:  " I have been asked what my mother’s secret is to now being 97. It seems to involve chocolate biscuits at elevenses, the occasional day in bed with a hot dog, endless Charbonnel et Walker chocolates, making sure there is always Toblerone in the house, and being properly dressed — even for the pub.

Of course, it is quite a challenge finding a birthday present for someone turning ninety-seven. By that point, one has not only received everything one might want, but has also very likely improved upon it, edited it, or sent it back.

In my mother’s case, she has tasted almost everything, seen almost everything, met almost everyone worth meeting, and travelled just about everywhere worth going. There is very little left to wrap"

 Lady Pamela was the eldest surviving great-great-grandchild of Queen Victoria.

Victoria - Alice - Victoria - Louis - Pamela

Victoria - Alice - Victoria - Alice -  Philip

Victoria - Edward - George - George - Elizabeth


https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2024/04/lady-pamela-hicks-celebrates-her-95th.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2023/04/lady-pamela-hicks-no-invitation-to.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2020/12/lady-pamela-hicks-received-covid-vaccine.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2019/04/lady-pamela-hicks-celebrates-90.html