Saturday, September 25, 2010

Duke & Duchess of Windsor

King Edward VIII was the eldest child of Britain's King George V and Queen Mary. In 1930, while he was still Prince of Wales, Edward met an American woman named Wallis Warfield Simpson. Her first marriage had ended in divorce, and when she met the prince she was married to her second husband, Ernest Simpson. The prince, who was single and had a reputation as a playboy, fell deeply in love with Mrs. Simpson.
George V died in January 1936, and Edward VIII succeeded him as king. Mrs. Simpson divorced her husband later that year. The king was determined to marry her, but he could not convince the royal family or government officials to accept a divorced woman as his queen. On December 11, Edward VIII officially abdicated. In a radio broadcast that evening, he explained his decision to the public, saying, 

"I have found it impossible to carry on the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge the duties of king as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love."



His younger brother succeeded him as King George VI and granted Edward the title Duke of Windsor.
 The Duke of Windsor married Wallis on June 3, 1937, but she was never accepted by the royal family. For the rest of their lives the couple lived abroad, mostly in France. In 1940, during the Second World War, the Duke became governor of the Bahamas. In 1945, he and his wife returned to France. The Duke wrote an autobiography, A King's Story, which was published in 1951. The Duchess of Windsor's autobiography, The Heart Has Reasons, was published in 1956.
 The Duke of Windsor died in Paris on May 28, 1972. The Duchess remained in Paris until her own death on April 24, 1986. They are buried at the royal Frogmore cemetery at Windsor Castle in England.

The below Photographs are from the Private Collections Book by Sotheby's which I bought in New York long time ago.
Some of them are from Lord Dudley originally, who was a life long friend of the Duke of Windsor, whom he met at Oxford in 1912. 
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor traveled out to the United States in November 1947, where they stayed until their return to France sometime around the end of June 1948. This was a longer than usual stay in the States and they divided their time among their usual activities - Duck Shooting and Golf in Florida, staying in the Waldorf-Astoria in New York and Parties everywhere - with the less usual: a trip to Cuba, and renting a house for a time on Long Island.