In 1942, Lloyd-George was commissioned into the Welsh Guards, where he gained the rank of Captain. In the Second World War, he fought with the 3rd Battalion in Italy between 1944 and 1945. After the war, he served with the 2nd Battalion in Germany.
On the death of his grandfather in March 1945, Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, determined that all four of his old friend's grandsons in the services should be brought home to attend the funeral in north Wales. One was an artillery officer stationed on the Rhine, another was flying a bomber, a third was serving in HMS Enterprise in the North Sea and the fourth, Lloyd-George, was fighting in Italy. Lloyd-George was at once dispatched to Naples by fighter plane, given a bed in Field Marshal Alexander's villa, flown by bomber to England the next morning, flown to north Wales in a Spitfire (flown by a Polish pilot with a schoolboy atlas and no knowledge of Wales) and delivered at Llanystumdwy one hour before the funeral.[2]
In November 1999, the House of Lords Act was passed, limiting the number of hereditary peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords to 92. As a result, Lloyd-George lost his seat.
Marriages and children
Lloyd-George married first Ruth Margaret Coit (died 16 May 2003), daughter of Richard Coit and Violet Josephine Slocock, on 8 September 1949, but they divorced in 1982. With Coit he had three children, two sons and one daughter:
David Richard Owen Lloyd George, 4th Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor (born 22 January 1951)
Robert John Daniel Lloyd George (born 13 August 1952)