Ruth Hubbard (Girl Guides)

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Born(1896-10-30)30 October 1896
Westminster, London
Died23 August 1955(1955-08-23) (aged 58)
OccupationsGirl Guide leader
Mayoress of Buckingham
Hon. Ruth Hubbard
Born(1896-10-30)30 October 1896
Westminster, London
Died23 August 1955(1955-08-23) (aged 58)
OccupationsGirl Guide leader
Mayoress of Buckingham
FatherEgerton Hubbard, 2nd Baron Addington

The Hon. Ruth Hubbard (30 October 1896 – 23 August 1955) was a Girl Guide leader and six times Mayoress of Buckingham. She was a recipient of the Silver Fish Award, Girl Guiding’s highest adult honour.

Ruth Mary Hubbard was the youngest daughter of Egerton Hubbard, 2nd Baron Addington and Mary Adelaide Portal. The family home was Seven Gables in the village of Addington, Buckinghamshire. She attended schools in Aldeburgh, Suffolk and West Drayton, Middlesex.[1]

She was a devout Christian, regularly attending St. Mary’s Church in Addington. She also supported the Free Churches[2] and the Buckingham Corps of the Salvation Army,[3] occasionally preaching at Buckingham’s Army Hall.[4] She served as Secretary of the Buckingham Church Union in the early 1930s.[5]

Hubbard was a keen gardener, supporting the Buckingham and District Horticultural Society.[6] In 1933 in order to protect her crops, she "destroyed 1,020 cabbage butterflies”.[7] She also bred pedigree rabbits[8] and was the President of the Buckingham Beekeepers' Association.[9]

She was well travelled. She visited South Africa in 1921.[1] In 1927-8 she travelled to Shanghai to meet her brother, Rt. Hon. Lord Addington, who had been Custodian of Enemy Property in China for four years.[10] They returned to the UK via Japan, Korea, Honolulu, mainland USA and Canada.[11] She also travelled to Russia and Denmark,[12] and, following WWII, to Oberammergau, Germany, after which she reported that "at one stage there were French, German and British in the same railway compartment and one of them remarked how wonderful it was that they should all be travelling together as friends once again".[13]

Hubbard died at home following a heart attack on 23 August 1955. In her will she left the majority of her estate (over £20,000) to her companion of 20 years, Annie Lisbeth McKenzie,[14] who had nursed Hubbard’s mother in the final year of her life, subsequently becoming Hubbard’s housekeeper, secretary and chauffeuse. Hubbard in turn nursed McKenzie through ill health, giving her "unfailing attention and care". They attended church together and supported the work of the Salvation Army and the Red Cross.[15]

War service

During WWI Hubbard was a nurse.[1] During WWII she was a warden’s messenger for the A.R.P.,[16] secretary of Buckingham’s National Savings Movement,[17] a volunteer for the Parcels Scheme and helped the elderly and infirm with hospital transport.[18] She was a member of Winslow’s British Red Cross Detachment 88, which involved welcoming repatriated POWs to RAF Westcott, which was in operation between 1942 and 1946.[19]

Fundraising

She was an organising secretary for Buckingham’s 1941 War Weapons Week fundraiser, which raised £168,040.[20] In 1944 the village of Addington raised £3,219 for Salute the Soldier week, having set an initial target of £350.[21]

Girl Guides

Hubbard was in charge of the Addington and Buckingham Girl Guides from 1918.[22] From 1918 to 1924 she was a District Commissioner for Buckinghamshire,[23] becoming Division Commissioner for Buckinghamshire North[24] from 1924 to 1927. In 1927 until at least 1933 she was the Assistant Division Commissioner for all of Buckinghamshire.[25] Whilst in South Africa[26] and Shanghai she took a "keen interest" in the work of the local Girl Guides' Associations.[27] In 1930 she donated the District Shield to the Buckingham Girl Guides, to be awarded annually for the "best Guide work".[28] She herself was a recipient of the Silver Fish Award, the Girl Guide movement’s highest adult honour, in 1918. Towards the end of WWII, she was appointed by the Home Office to introduce Girl Guiding to Aylesbury’s Borstal Institution, now HM Prison Aylesbury.[1]

Community service

Public service

References

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