Constance Barbara Clarke
Constance Barbara Clarke, Lady Baird, later Lady Charles Kennedy, known as Constance, Lady Baird, was a British military nurse and pioneering yachtswoman.
Early life and family
Constance Barbara Clarke was born at Avishays House, Chaffcombe, near Chard, Somerset in 1866, daughter of Edward Clarke, a solicitor and his wife Barbara. After studying in Paris, she trained as a nurse at St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London.On 6 March 1905 she married the retired Rear Admiral Sir John Kennedy Erskine Baird. They lived at Wootton, Isle of Wight where both were active in sailing and the Cowes Regatta. Sir John was 30 years older than Constance, and died in 1908, leaving her a childless widow at the age of forty-two.
Nursing career
Having trained as a nurse prior to her marriage, Lady Baird served as President of the Cowes Branch of the British Red Cross Society.When World War I broke out, she helped organise a hospital for wounded soldiers at Northwood House. She joined active service in France and Belgium, first as a trooper, then serjeant, in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry.
Yachtswoman
After the war, Constance moved to Fremington, near Barnstaple, Devon, where she had inherited Fremington Manor from an aunt.She retained her passion for sailing and acquired one of the first 6-metre yachts, ‘’Thistle’’, built by William Fife & Sons, in 1923, competing in regattas and races. In 1925 she won the King of Spain’s Cup, for which she was the only woman competitor.
She championed the founding of an international competition for 6-metre yachts, the British-American Cup, which ran from 1921 to 1955, and in 1924, donated the Lady Baird Trophy for 6 metre yacht races.
Later life
In 1925, she married Sir Charles Kennedy, a distant cousin of her first husband, who later became the 5th Marquess of Ailsa.Constance was taken ill and died while visiting a cousin, the Canadian politician Alexander McNeill, in Wiarton, Ontario, in November 1931.