Florence Bligh, Countess of Darnley


Florence Rose Bligh, Countess of Darnley, DBE was the Australian-born wife of Ivo Bligh, 8th Earl of Darnley.

Life

Florence Morphy was born in Victoria, daughter of John Stephen Morphy, sometime police magistrate at Beechworth, who died in 1861. She met Ivo Bligh at Rupertswood when he captained the English cricket team that visited Australia in 1882-83. According to one report, she was the leader of the Melbourne ladies who presented Bligh with "a tiny silver urn, containing what they termed 'the ashes of Australian cricket.'"
She and Bligh were married in St. Mary's Church, Sunbury, with the reception held at Rupertswood, near Melbourne, Australia on 9 February 1884. In 1900, when her husband succeeded to the title of Earl of Darnley, she became Countess of Darnley.
In 1902 she co-wrote, with Randolph Hodgson, a romantic novel titled Elma Trevor. In the novel, the eponymous heroine, "loved by one man... marrie another, and in the end discovers that she is made for a third".
During the First World War she and her husband set aside the state apartments of their home, Cobham Hall in Kent, to accommodate 50 Australian officers. Lady Florence was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1919.
She died on 30 August 1944 and was buried in the collegiate church of St Mary Magdalene, Cobham, Kent Her grave, and that of her husband, was rededicated in May 2011.

Family

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