Jump to content

Elizabeth Biddulph, Baroness Biddulph

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rosiestep (talk | contribs) at 17:17, 1 March 2022 (Expanding article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lady Elizabeth Philippa Biddulph (15 November 1834 – January 1916) was an English humanitarian and temperance leader.

Early life

Elizabeth Philippa Yorke was born in England, 15 November 1834. She was a daughter of the Charles Yorke, 4th Earl of Hardwicke,[1] and Susan, sixth daughter of Thomas Liddell, 1st Baron Ravensworth.[2]

Career

Lady Biddulph was led to join a temperance society in Ledbury through the unwillingness of her physician, the eminent Sir Andrew Clark, to prescribe alcoholic stimulants for her during an attack of illness. His prescription of total abstinence resulted in such positive benefit that she took the total-abstinence pledge and put on the blue ribbon, becoming an active worker in the cause of temperance reform. She was soon afterward elected president of the Ledbury Temperance Union. She also united with the Rechabites and the Good Templars. During 1896-98, she was president of the Women's Total Abstinence Union. Besides her activities in the temperance cause, Lady Biddulph devoted much of her time to the relief of the poor, and the promotion of various movements for the better care of the sick and dependent classes.[1] She was a patron of the Ledbury Cottage Hospital.[2]

In 1910, she published a biography of her father, Charles Philip Yorke, fourth Earl of Hardwicke : a memoir by his daughter, the Lady Biddulph of Ledbury.[3]

Lady Biddulph was a member of the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert.[1] She acted as Woman of the Bedchamber to Queen Victoria.[2]

Personal life

She first married Henry John Adeane, M.P., of Babraham Hall, Cambridgeshire,[2] who died in 1870.[1]

In 1877, she married Michael Biddulph, afterward Baron Biddulph of Ledbury, Herefordshire, a member of the banking firm of Cocks, Biddulph, and Co., London. Mr. Biddulph was raised to the peerage in 1903.[1]

She died at her London home in January 1916.[1][2]

Selected works

  • Charles Philip Yorke, fourth Earl of Hardwicke : a memoir by his daughter, the Lady Biddulph of Ledbury, 1910 Text

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Cherrington, Ernest Hurst (1925). Standard Encyclopedia of the Alcohol Problem. Vol. 1. Westerville, Ohio: American Issue Publishing Company. p. 343. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e "DEATH OF LADY BIDDULPH". The Gloucestershire Echo. 14 January 1916. p. 4. Retrieved 1 March 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "HARDWICKE". Quarterly Bulletin of the Brooklyn Public Library. The Library: 27. 1908. Retrieved 1 March 2022.