Royal Sisters
Page 46
Sheridan, Lisa. Our Princesses at Home, London: John Murray, 1940.
———. Our Princesses in 1942. London: John Murray, 1942.
———. Princess Elizabeth at Home. London: John Murray, 1944.
———. Off Duty: The Royal Family at Leisure. London: John Murray, 1947.
———. From Cabbages to Kings, London: Odhams Press Limited, 1955.
Shew, Betty Spencer. Royal Wedding. London: MacDonald & Co. Ltd., 1947.
Soames, Mary. Clementine Churchill. London: Cassell Ltd., 1979.
Strachey, Lytton. Queen Victoria. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1921.
Sykes, Christopher. Nancy: The Life of Lady Astor. New York: Harper & Row, 1972.
Taylor, A.J.P. Beaverbrook. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1972.
———. English History, 1914–1945. New York: Penguin Books, 1982 (pb).
Templewood, Viscount. Nine Troubled Years. London: Collins, 1954.
Terraine, John. The Life and Times of Lord Mountbatten. London: Hutchinson & Co. Ltd., 1969.
Thomson, Malcolm. The Life and Times of George VI, 1895-1952. London: Odhams Press Limited, 1952.
Thorne, J. O., MA, and T. C. Collcott, MA. Chambers Biographical Dictionary, rev. ed. Edinburgh, Scotland: W&R Chambers Ltd., 1984.
Tisdall, E.E.P. Royal Destiny. London: Stanley Paul and Co. Ltd., 1955.
Time-Life Books. This Fabulous Century, 1920-1930. New York: Time-Life, 1969.
———. This Fabulous Century, 1940-1950. New York: Time-Life, 1969.
———. This Fabulous Century, 1950-1960. New York: Time-Life, 1970.
Townsend, Peter. The Last Emperor. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1976.
———. Time and Chance. London: William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd., 1978.
Trevelyan, G. M. Illustrated English Social History: 2, Middlsex, England: Penguin Books Ltd., 1973.
Turner, E. S. The Court of St. James’s. London: Michael Joseph, 1960.
Vickers, Hugo. Cecil Beaton: A Biography. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1985.
Warwick, Christopher. Princess Margaret. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1983.
———. Two Centuries of Royal Weddings. London: Arthur Barker, 1983.
———. Abdication. London: Sidgwick & Jackson Limited, 1986.
Wheeler-Bennett, John W. King George VI, His Life and Reign. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1958.
Williams, Neville. Chronology of the Modern World, 1763-1965. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books Ltd., 1975 (pb).
Wilson, Edmund. The Thirties. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1980.
———. The Forties. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1983 (pb).
Wilson, Mary, et al. The Queen. New York: Penguin Books, 1977.
Wilson, Mary Stewart. Queen Mary’s Doll’s House. New York: Abbeville Press, Inc., 1988.
Windsor, Duchess of. The Heart Has Its Reasons. London: Michael Joseph Ltd., 1956.
Windsor, H.R.H. The Duke of. A King’s Story. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1951.
———. The Crown and the People, 1902-1953. London: Cassell & Company Ltd., 1953.
———. A Family Album. London: Cassell & Company Ltd., 1960.
Winn, Godfrey. The Young Queen: The Life Story of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. London: Hutchinson, 1952.
Wulff, Louis. Elizabeth and Philip: Our Heiress and Her Consort. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co., Ltd., 1947.
———. Queen of Tomorrow: An Authentic Study of H.R.H. The Princess Elizabeth. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co., Ltd., 1948.
Young, Sheila. The Queen’sJeweliery. London: Ebury Press, 1969.
Ziegler, Philip. Mountbatten. New York: Harper & Row, 1985 (pb).
MAGAZINES/PERIODICALS
Britain in the Thirties, Ad Profiles 24, Architectural Design, London.
Collier’s, "Blooming of Margaret Rose," July 17, 1948.
The Coronation of Their Majesties King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, Official Souvenir Programme, 1937.
Life, October 31, 1949 (27:96); December 12, 1949 (27:45); July 20, 1953 (35:28); October 10,1955 (39:135-136); October 24,1955 (39:38); October 31, 1955 (39:34); November 14, 1955 (39:48); November 12, 1956 (41:60); March 7, 1960 (48:36).
Newsweek, “Margaret’s Romance,” July 27, 1953 (42:46), December 27, 1954 (44:31); February 7, 1955 (Cover story, 45:43); July 3, 1955 (46:36); September 5, 1955 (46:62); October 24, 1955 (46:41); November 7, 1955 (46:46); November 14, 1955 (46:46); February 27, 1956 (47:60); May 20, 1957 (49:53); April 7, 1958 (51:38).
The New Yorker, “Letter from London,” Mollie Panter-Downes, Dec. 4, 1947-Jan. 15, 1948; Feb. 28-April 3; May 29-July 17; July 24-Aug. 28; Sept. 4-Oct. 16; Oct. 23-Nov. 27; Nov. 22, 1948-Jan. 15, 1949; Jan. 22-Feb. 19; Feb. 26-April 16; April 23-June 4; June II-:July 16; July 23-Sept. 10; Sept. 17-Oct. 22; Oct. 29-Dec. 10; Dec. 17, 1949-Feb. 18, 1950; Feb. 25-April 8; April 15-May 20; May 27-July 8; July 15-Aug. 26; Sept. 2-Oct. 7; Dec. 9, 1950-Feb. 10, 1951; Feb. 17-Mar. 31; April 7-May 12; May 19-June 30; Sept. 1-Oct. 6; Oct. 13-Nov. 24; Dec. I, 1951-Jan. 5,1952;Jan. 12-Feb.16; Feb. 23-Mar. 29; April 5-May 17; July 19-Aug. 23; Aug. 30-Oct. 11; Oct. 18-Nov. 22; Nov. 29-Dec. 27, 1952; Jan. 3, 1953-Feb. 14; Feb. 21-Mar. 28; April 4-May 16; May 23-July 4; July 11-Aug. 22; Aug. 29-0ct. 10; Oct. 17-Nov. 28; Dec. 5, 1953-Feb. 13, 1954; Feb. 20-Mar. 27; April 3-May 15; May 22-June 26; July 3-Aug. 14; Aug. 21-Sept. 25; Oct. 2-Nov. 12; Nov. 20-Dec. 25, 1954; Jan. I, 1955-Feb. 12; Feb. 19-Mar. 26; April 2-May 14; May 21-June 25; July 24-Aug. 13; Aug. 20-Sept. 24; Oct. I-Nov. 12; Nov. 19-Dec. 31, 1955.
New York Times Magazine, December 8, 1946 (p. 9); January 12, 1947 (p. 14); May 25, 1947 (p. 18); July 27, 1947 (p. 17); August 21, 1949 (p. 14); December 10,1950 (p. 24); August 2,1953 (page 13);January 17, 1954 (p. 53); November 6, 1955 (p. 28); January 15, 1961 (p. 27).
Royal Monthly Magazine, Vol. 7, Nos. 5 and 6.
Souvenir of the Coronation, presented with Woman’s Journal, May 12, 1937.
Time, December 22,1947 (50:42); June 13, 1949 (53:36); July 25,1949 (54:20); August 14, 1950 (56:30); October 9, 1950 (56:42); August 13,1951 (58:39); September 3, 1951 (58:48); December 3, 1951 (58:38); October 27, 1952 (60:47); July 20, 1953 (62:24); July 27, 1953 (62:18); January 4, 1954 (63:28); April 19, 1954 (63:44); August 30, 1954 (64:30); March 21, 1955 (66:26); August 22, 1955 (66:23); September 19, 1955 (66:32); October 10, 1955 (66:39); November 7,1955 (66:35); November 14,1955 (66:36); February 27,1956 (67:30); May 20,1957 (69:33); May 5,1958 (71:30); May 16, 1960 (75:26); November 12, 1965 (86:38): November 26, 1965 (86:29).
You Magazine, January 24, 1988.
Acknowledgments
The writing of this book has been a unique experience. Without the unstinting cooperation of so many of the close participants and witnesses to this Royal story, it could not have been written. It saddens me that I cannot thank each one personally here, but I shall, as I agreed, honor their request for anonymity. I am, however, forever grateful for the kindness shown me by these contributors, their amazing recall, eye and ear for detail and encyclopedic knowledge of the period that is the background for this book. Their graciousness and patience was exceptional. I was accorded much hospitality while in their homes, access to papers and to private photographs relating to this book, and extreme courtesy as hours were spent taping their recollections. I thank you all from my heart.
My gratitude is equally boundless to Mrs. Lavinia Lascelles Hankinson and Mrs. Caroline Lascelles Erskine, who were so helpful in making the papers of their father, Sir Alan Lascelles, available for me to study; to Hélène Cordêt for her kindness; to Dinah Sheridan, for permitting me to quote from the memoirs of her mother, the Royal Photographer Lisa Sheridan, and to Peter Townsend for his generosity in allowing me to quote so liberally from his book Time and Chance.
A special note of thanks to Elizabeth Bennett and Correlli Barnett, MA, of the Churchill Archives Centre, David Crippen of the Henry Ford Museum Archives, and Benedict K. Zobrist of the Harry S. Truman Library. Score
s of additional historians, librarians and archivists in England, France and the United States helped me in my research and I owe them a great debt of gratitude.
I have been exceptionally fortunate to have had the able research assistance of Sally Slaney in London. She has made this biographer’s task far easier. I would also like to thank Liz Claridge for her help in the photo research and Polly Brown who did such a splendid job of tracking down what information needed to be gathered from the various archives and federal agencies in Washington, D.C.
For over two decades I have had the good fortune to be represented in Great Britain by Hilary Rubinstein, and his personal interest in my work has always been extraordinary. My many thanks to him for all the introductions to various people interviewed for this book and for his good and helpful suggestions. My additional thanks to Clarissa Rushdie who so graciously and swiftly attends all my requests. My appreciation as well to Mitch Douglas at I.C.M. who is both my agent and good friend.
Few authors can be fortunate enough to have two fine editors. To Carol O’Brien of William Collins, Publishers, and to Harvey Ginsberg of William Morrow, Publishers, my gratitude is unending. Both have always been as near as a telephone and no query was ever dismissed as inconsequential, however unimportant it might have seemed. My thanks also to Simon King, Peter James and Ron Clark of William Collins, Publishers, and to Frank Mount (who has my continuing gratitude) of William Morrow.
Last, but certainly not least, I want to thank my husband, Stephen Citron, for his support and his constant help, his unerring editorial eye, his patience, and most of all his keen good judgment.
Anne Edwards