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  1. Lady Dorothy Lygon (briefly Mrs Heber-Percy; 22 February 1912 – 13 November 2001) was an English socialite, and one of the Bright Young Things. She served as a Flight Officer in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force during WWII, and later became an archivist.

  2. In 1985, he married Lady Dorothy Lygon, the fourth daughter of William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp, whom he had known for over fifty years; this relationship "cheered his later years, when he was lame from a stroke and several brushes with death" but they "parted amicably" a year later.

  3. When Dorothy Lygon was born in 1512, in Madresfield, Worcestershire, England, her father, Sir Richard Lygon, was 22 and her mother, Margaret Greville, was 19. She married Sir John Bourne. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 4 daughters. She died on 8 September 1567, in North Malvern, Worcestershire, England, United Kingdom, at the age ...

  4. Lady Dorothy Lygon (22 February 1912 – 13 November 2001) was an English socialite, part of the Bright Young Things. Lady Dorothy Lygon was born on 22 February 1912, the daughter of William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp and Lady Lettice Grosvenor.

  5. 24 de abr. de 2015 · There’s nothing to smile at in the story of Heber-Percy’s unexpected late marriage to Lady Dorothy Lygon, an elderly friend whose sexier sister had frolicked with him in bygone years.

  6. 17 de nov. de 2001 · LADY Dorothy Heber Percy, known to her friends as "Coote", who has died aged 89, was the youngest and cosiest of the Lygon sisters. She was born Lady Dorothy Lygon on February 22 1912,...

  7. evelynwaughsociety.org › 2016 › telegraph-publishes-remembrance-of-waughTelegraph Publishes Remembrance of Waugh

    10 de abr. de 2016 · When Dorothy Lygon read about Basil Seal unsuspectingly eating his girlfriend in an aromatic stew, she was back at her family home of Madresfield, the moated manor-house overlooking the Malvern Hills where Waugh had written Black Mischief, and on which he based his most vulnerable and popular work, Brideshead Revisited.