Wednesday, 11 December 2024

Welsh Mystery: Heiress Gwyneth Ericka Morgan : ‘A Beautiful Nuisance’


 GWYNETH ERICKA MORGAN


Poor Gwyneth!  A Beautiful Nuisance

The Honourable Gwyneth Ericka Morgan, was the only daughter of Courtenay Morgan, the third Lord Tredegar. She was one of the Bright Young People of the post  Great War era who disappeared from a house in Wimbledon on 11 December 1924 and whose body was later discovered in the River Thames.

Gwyneth was born in London in 1895, the second child of Courtenay Morgan and Lady Katharine Carnegie, later Lord and Lady Tredegar, of Tredegar Park, Monmouthshire. The family history on both her father and mothers sides is filled with a variety of the rich, the famous and the notorious. The Morgans had their roots in South Wales. The Carnegies in the Highlands of Scotland

Gwyneth spent a great deal of her life in London, or abroad, and in the Surrey home maintained by her mother, near Dorking. She also spent time with her maternal grandparents, the Earl and Countess of Southesk, at Kinnaird Castle, and with her brother Evan Morgan (1893-1949) and her parents at sea on board the family yacht Liberty

She spent part of her childhood at Ruperra CastleSouth Wales. Talented, attractive, an heiress to the Tredegar fortunes from land, coal and agriculture, she became a part of the rituals of the great and good of London and Highland Society in the years before and after the First World War. Court, Northern Meeting, Balls, the Shooting Season and health and gambling trips to Cannes, Paris and Italy

Gwyneth had an adventurous streak and a reputation for being something of a bohemian. She was however struck down with ill-health after the excesses of high living and overseas travel. She mixed with some East-End and West End types that her family disapproved of and they warned her about the consequences of scandal on the family's name.   

Coming into some perilous situations involving dangerous people, and with the increasing concerns of her family and friends she spent her last years moving between rented accommodation as though on the run. 

Receiving medical care from the most famous physician in the country, a Royal doctor,  Sir John Atkins, Gwyneth suddenly disappeared, her body was later pulled out of the Thames five months later in May 1925. Was it an accident, or was it foul play? 

And was it Gwyneth's body that was pulled from the River Thames?

Writers Monty Dart and William Cross, FSA Scot spent 7 years researching Gwyneth’s story for a book they published in 2012, entitled “ A Beautiful Nuisance. The Life and Death of the Hon. Gwyneth Ericka Morgan”. 

Copies of the book are still available directly from WILLIAM CROSS, FSA SCOT,  and also on ebay and Amazon

FURTHER INFORMATION  

E-mail Will Cross 

williecross@aol.com


                                                         A BEAUTIFUL NUISANCE

LINK TO EBAY FOR LAST COPIES OF THE BOOK


https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/205055214519

 

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