Cornelia Guest, Baroness Wimborne


Cornelia Henrietta Maria Guest, Baroness Wimborne, was a British aristocrat and landowner. She was the wife of Ivor Guest, 1st Baron Wimborne, and the mother of their six children. She was an aunt of the future Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill. As a philanthropist, she is remembered as being the namesake of the historic Lady Wimborne Cottages and the Lady Wimborne Bridge in Dorset.

Biography

Cornelia Spencer-Churchill was born to the politician John Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough, and his wife Lady Frances Vane, into the aristocratic Spencer-Churchill family. Her mother was of Anglo-Irish nobility. Cornelia was their eldest daughter and the third born of their eleven children.
In 1868, Cornelia married Ivor Guest, which was seen for him as an elevation in status for a Baronet. In 1880, he was created Baron Wimborne, and she became Baroness Wimborne.
Cornelia, helped oversee the philanthropic project of building estate cottages to improve the living conditions of workers in and around Poole, Dorset. Although the project was started by her mother-in-law, Charlotte Guest, Cornelia was responsible for the building of the majority of them, which are now known as 'Lady Wimborne Cottages'. After the passing of the Elementary Education Act 1870, the Guests sponsored the building of schools at Hampreston, Hamworthy and Broadstone. They also contributed towards the founding of churches in Parkstone and Broadstone.
In the 1918 Birthday Honours, she was made Officer of the Order of the British Empire for her work as founder and President of the Dorset Guild of Workers.

Issue

Their children included the following: