Beatrice Beckett
Beatrice Helen Beckett was the first wife of British politician Anthony Eden.
Early life
She was the third daughter of Sir William Gervase Beckett, Bt., a banker, Conservative MP, and chairman of the Yorkshire Post, and his wife, Mabel Theresa Duncombe. She was a relation of Daisy Greville, Countess of Warwick.Marriage
In 1923, Beckett married Anthony [Eden, 1st Earl of Avon|Anthony Eden], a Conservative politician, during a lull in his first election campaign. Their honeymoon was cut short after two days so her husband could campaign in Warwick. Soon afterwards, her husband entered Parliament of [the United Kingdom|Parliament] representing Warwick and Leamington.The couple had three sons:
- Simon Gascoigne Eden ; a navigator in the RAF.
- Robert Eden ; lived for fifteen minutes.
- Nicholas Eden, 2nd Earl of Avon ; served after the war as aide-de-camp to the Governor General of Canada.
Her separation from Eden increased in 1941, when the family moved to Binderton House, near Chichester, Sussex, while Eden, to meet his wartime responsibilities, lived in a flat in the Foreign Office. The marriage was dealt its "final blow" when the couple's eldest son, Pilot Officer Simon Eden, predeceased his parents after being reported missing in action in Burma in June 1945. Beatrice spent the rest of the war in Paris, and in 1946 left Eden to live in the United States.
Divorce
The marriage was dissolved in 1950 "on the grounds of his wife's desertion" after 27 years. The parting was amicable and the former couple remained friends.Two years later, Beatrice's former husband married Clarissa Spencer-Churchill. The Church Times despaired that public approval for the second marriage "shows how far the climate of public opinion has changed for the worse, even since 1936."
Her lover, an "eminent American", reneged on his promise to marry her. She died in 1957 and is buried in the Beckett family plot at St Gregory's Minster, Kirkdale, North Yorkshire.