Caroline Douglas
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13 July 1821[1]
The Dowager Marchioness of Queensberry | |
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| Born | Caroline Margaret Clayton 13 July 1821[1] |
| Died | 14 February 1904 (aged 82) Glen Stuart, Annan, Dumfries and Galloway |
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| Children | |
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Caroline Alice Margaret Douglas, Dowager Marchioness of Queensberry (née Clayton; 13 July 1821 – 14 February 1904) was an Anglo-Irish peer and Irish nationalist benefactor.[3][4]
Caroline Douglas was born in 1821 at Ballylickey House near Bantry Bay in County Cork, Ireland.[1] Her father was English, Sir William Clayton, a retired British army general and one of the members of parliament for Marlow, Buckinghamshire. Her mother, Alice Clayton (born O'Donnell), was from County Mayo, and was a Roman Catholic, but despite this the couple's four children were raised as Anglicans. Douglas lived in Bantry, County Cork, until the age of two, when the family moved to England to the family seat of Harleyford House, Buckinghamshire. This house was regularly visited by royalty and politicians, including Napoleon III. When her father refused to give his consent for her to marry Archibald Douglas, Lord Drumlanrig, the couple eloped and were married at Gretna Green on 28 May 1840.[3][5] The couple went on to have five sons and two daughters: Gertrude, John, Francis, Archibald, and twins James and Florence. One son died in infancy. Their marriage suffered, due to her husband's gambling and adultery.