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  1. Gwendolen Florence Mary Guinness, Countess of Iveagh (née Onslow; 22 July 1881 – 16 February 1966) was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat and Conservative politician. She was, by marriage, a member of the Guinness brewing dynasty.

  2. Gwendolen Florence Mary Guinness, Countess of Iveagh (née Onslow; 22 July 1881 – 16 February 1966) was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat and Conservative politician. She was, by marriage, a member of the Guinness brewing dynasty.

  3. In 1905 the Hon. Rupert Guinness (Viscount Elveden) bought land that had formerly been part of Woking Park from his father-in-law, the 4 th Earl of Onslow of Clandon Park, and created Pyrford Court, designed by Clyde Young.

  4. 21 de set. de 2019 · Gwendolen Florence Mary Guinness, Countess of Iveagh - known as Gwenny - (22 July 1881 – 16 February 1966) was a Conservative politician in the United Kingdom, and by marriage a member of the Anglo-Irish Guinness brewing family.

  5. O . n the 16thFebruary, 1966, Gwendolen Guinness, Countess of Iveagh, died at the age of 84. Just under nineteen months later, her husband, Rupert Guinness, the 2ndEarl of Iveagh also died aged 93, (on the 14thSeptember, 1967).

  6. Biography. Guinness was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. [2] . He was a lieutenant in the 1st London Volunteer battalion, and in March 1900 volunteered for active service in South Africa during the Second Boer War, [3] where he served with the Irish Hospital Corps.

  7. The Iveagh Trust. Adelaide Maria Guinness by George Elgar Hicks. Iveagh House. After Edward Cecil’s death in 1927, his eldest son, Rupert, became the second Earl of Iveagh and inherited Farmleigh and 80 St Stephen’s Green. The latter he presented the Irish State in 1939.