Cherry Drummond, 16th Baroness Strange
Jean Cherry Drummond of Megginch, 16th Baroness Strange (London, 17 December 1928 – Megginch Castle, 11 March 2005) was a cross bench hereditary peer in the House of Lords. She also wrote romantic novels and historical works.
Personal life
Strange was educated at Oxenfoord Castle boarding school near Edinburgh, at St Andrews University (where she read English and history) and at Cambridge University.<ref name = Who'sWho/>[1][2] She married Humphrey Evans, MC, a captain in the Mountain Artillery, in 1952. They both assumed the surname Drummond of Megginch when they moved to Megginch Castle. The couple had three sons and three daughters:
- Adam Humphrey Drummond, 17th Baron Strange (b. 1953)
- Hon Charlotte Cherry Drummond (b. 1955)
- Hon Humphrey John Jardine Drummond (b. 1961)
- Hon Amelie Margaret Mary Drummond (b. 1963)
- Hon John Humphrey Hugo Drummond (b. 1966)
- Hon Catherine Star Violetta Drummond (b. 1967)
In April 2006 it emerged that Lady Strange had changed her will on her deathbed, leaving her entire estate to her youngest daughter Catherine, cutting out her other five children.[3]
The actress Geraldine Somerville is her niece.
Title
Although the family home is the 17th century Megginch Castle in Perthshire, Scotland, the family title, Baron Strange, is in the English peerage. Her father, John Drummond, 15th Baron Strange, had spent many years attempting to terminate an abeyance that arose on the death of the Duke of Atholl in 1957; he was confirmed in the title in 1965. The title went into abeyance once again on his death in 1982, but it was terminated in Cherry's favour in 1986, and she made her maiden speech on 4 March 1987. Upon the Baroness's death the title was inherited by her eldest son, Adam.
Politics and public life
She held traditional conservative views, but resigned the Conservative Party whip in December 1998 when William Hague dismissed Lord Cranborne for negotiating with Tony Blair on reform of the House of Lords. Following reforms which reduced the number of hereditary peers who were entitled to sit in the House of Lords, her 1999 manifesto to be elected to occupy one of the remaining seats (limited to 75 words) was "I bring flowers every week to this House from my castle in Perthshire." She was elected to fill a cross bench seat.
She was President of the War Widows Association of Great Britain from 1990.<ref name = Who'sWho/>
Writing
Strange wrote several romantic novels under the pen name "Cherry Evans", including Love From Belinda (1960), Lalage in Love (1962), Creatures Great and Small (1968) and Love Is For Ever (1988). As Cherry Drummond, she also wrote The Remarkable Life of Victoria Drummond - Marine Engineer,<ref name = Who'sWho>Steeman, Elizabeth (Editor) (15 October 2001) The International Who's Who of Women, Routlidge, Page 550, ISBN 978-0792372516,</ref> a biography of an intrepid aunt, Victoria Drummond, a goddaughter of Queen Victoria who was an engineer for 40 years from 1922, including with the Blue Funnel Line.
References
- ↑ Langdon, Julia (1 April 2005) Obituary Baroness Strange The Guardian, Retrieved 25 January 2015
- ↑ Lundy, Darryl (17 January 2015) Jean Cherry Drummond of Megginch, Baroness Strange The Peerage, Retrieved 25 January 2015
- ↑ Hamilton, Alan; English, Shirley (April 20, 2006). "Strange case of the baroness who rewrote £3m will on her deathbed". London: The Times. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
Peerage of England | ||
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Preceded by John Drummond |
Baroness Strange 1986–2005 |
Succeeded by Adam Drummond |
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