Penelope Aitken

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Penelope Loader, Lady Aitken, MBE (2 December 19107 February 2005), styled The Hon. Lady Aitken and nicknamed 'Pempe', was an English socialite.

Born Penelope Loader Maffey, she was the daughter of Sir John Maffey, later 1st Baron Rugby, who was to become Governor-General of the Sudan, Permanent Secretary of the Colonial Office and wartime Ambassador to Dublin. Earlier, he had been the private secretary to the Viceroy of India and Governor of the Northwest Frontier Province, thus Penelope was born in Peshawar and spent her early years in India, where three of her siblings died in childhood.

When she was seven years old, she returned to England for prep school, then went on to Sherborne School for Girls. Her parents had a house, Anmer Hall, on the King's Sandringham estate, which led to her socialising with the royal family. Indeed, she became the King's favourite. Maffey was presented at Court and named Debutante of the Year. Strikingly beautiful, she was romantically linked with several men, including Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, Esmond Harmsworth and society artist Simon Elwes (1902-1975), which caused a minor scandal as he was married and a Roman Catholic. Maintaining a platonic friendship, she accompanied Prince Bernhard on his honeymoon and became good friends with his new wife, Juliana.

In 1938 she met Canadian William Aitken, a nephew of meida magnate Lord Beaverbrook, and a journalist at the Evening Standard. They were married later that year at St Peter's, Eaton Square. Their son Jonathan was born in Dublin in 1942 (Queen Juliana of the Netherlands stood sponsor) and their daughter Maria in 1945. William had joined the RAF and Penelope joined the WRVS, helping to evacuate German children to Ireland. In 1944, her husband was badly hurt in a Spitfire crash. She spent two years nursing him back to health, at a time when her baby son was ill with tuberculosis and the family home in London was bombed.

Her husband was elected as Conservative Member of Parliament for Bury St Edmunds in 1950 and was knighted, making Penelope Lady Aitken. She devoted herself to community work in support of her husband's political career, becoming a magistrate and running the Clothing Exchange, which played a major role in helping the victims of the East Coast floods in 1953. Eventually she was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).

She lived with the children in Halesworth to be near her beloved father, who died in 1969 aged 91. The family fortune was wiped out by death duties and a stock market crash. She restarted her affair with Simon Elwes, and then had a long relationship with Sir John Davis, chairman of Rank Xerox. Gardening was another passion. She created a famous garden at Playford, her moated Tudor house near Ipswich. Later she created an English garden at her house near Santa Eulalia on the Spanish island of Ibiza, smuggling sacks of soil and rare plants through customs.

Lady Aitken became a devoted companion to her son, Jonathan, supporting him in his journalistic, political and business career. She remained steadfast when Jonathan lost his libel trial, divorced and was sent to prison for perjury, even employing his friend from HMP Belmarsh, Spider Aguda, as her chauffeur, whom she would introduce by saying, "Meet my wonderful bullion-robber friend."

Lady Aitken continued to be seen at many parties and with many men. Satirist and broadcaster Noel Picarda instantly fell in love with her, and eventually became her live-in companion until his death in 2003. Her house and her parties were often the scene of political machinations in Conservative circles and she was often seen holding court among politicians or her family, whether in London, her local pub or the Gironde.

She was survived by her children - Jonathan Aitken and Maria Aitken. She was the grandmother of the actor Jack Davenport.

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