First Grand-daughter of British Prime Minister
TO BE CALLED ANNE Berchtesgaden and Birmingham were tho two places uppermost in Mrs. Neville Chamberlain’s mind when the Prime Minister’s air-liner was approaching Munich on September 15, states Marianne Mayfayre in the London Daily Telegraph. During the morning she talked by telephone with her daughter, Mrs. Stephen Lloyd, in Birmingham. The previous Saturday a baby girl was born to this 26-year-old mother, and the Downing Street grandparents were robbed by the -’nternational situation of any immediate prospect of seeing their first grand-daughter. Each day, however, Mrs. Chamberlain rang her daughter from No. 10 Downing Street, and gave her messages from her father. The baby is to be called Anne —after her grandmother—with the omission of the *‘i.” The Prime Minister invariably calls his wife “ Annie, ” but she is 11 Anne ’ ’ to everyone else. When this new Anne is christened — whether in London or Birmingham is not yet decided —she will probably wear the robe made for Mrs. Lloyd’s christening by the Prime Minister’s sister, Miss Hilda Chamberlain. It was worn two years ago by the baby’s brother Stephen. The front door of No. 10 Downing Street opened incessantly on September 14 for the stream of letters and telegrams of congratulations and good wishes sent both to the Prime Minister and Mrs. Chamberlain. Gifts of white heather arrived for Mrs. Chamberlain from well-wishers. The heather filled vases in her own sitting-room, where she arranged it effectively against the green colour scheme.
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Manawatu Times, Volume 63, Issue 237, 7 October 1938, Page 16
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247First Grand-daughter of British Prime Minister Manawatu Times, Volume 63, Issue 237, 7 October 1938, Page 16
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