Violet Valerie French Brougham Kindersley (13 February 1909 – 18 July 1997) was a Natal-born English socialite. She and her sister Essex were known as the "French sisters" and included in The Book of Beauty by Cecil Beaton.[1]
Biography
Violet Valerie French was born on 13 February 1909[2][3] at Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa,[4] the daughter of English cricketer Lt Col the Hon Edward Gerald Fleming French, Deputy Governor of Dartmoor Prison and Governor of Newcastle Prison (1883–1970), and Leila Elizabeth Fyfe King (d. 1959), daughter of Robert King, of Natal, South Africa.[2][5] Her grandfather was John French, 1st Earl of Ypres.[6][7]
In 1933, she was included, together with her sister, in The Book of Beauty by Cecil Beaton, which documented the "Bright Young Things" socialites of the 1920s. Beaton wrote: "Valerie, pink and white like sugar-coated almonds, with slow, brown eyes and pale corn-coloured hair, has the more flawless face. Her nose is perfection."[1]
She died on 18 July 1997, in Swindon, Wiltshire, England.[5][8]
Marriages
In 1926, she was engaged to Henry Bradley Martin, a Manhattan socialite. In 1929, she rushed to the United States to assist him after he was injured in an automobile accident in Colorado. The engagement was subsequently broken.[9]
On 26 November 1936, she married Captain Hon. Philip Leyland Kindersley (1907–1995), fourth son of Robert Kindersley, 1st Baron Kindersley and Gladys Margaret Beadle.[5][7][8] They had three children: Nicoletta Leila Kindersley (b. 1939), Virginia Alexandra de L'Estang Kindersley (b. 1943), and Christian Philip Kindersley (b. 1950).[8]
^ abcdeHammond, Peter W., editor. The Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members From the Earliest Times, Volume XIV: Addenda & Corrigenda. Stroud, Gloucestershire, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 1998
^Burke, Sir Bernard. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 51st edition. London, U.K.: Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1889