Violet Benson (English artist)


Violet Catherine Benson was an English aristocrat, artist and socialite.
Lady Violet was considered a beauty and was the subject of drawings by George Frederic Watts and John Singer Sargent, the latter exhibited at the Royal Society of Portrait Painters in 1916. She attended the Slade School of Fine Art.

Family and early life

Violet Catherine 'Letty' Manners was born on 24 April 1888 to Henry Manners, then Marquess of Granby, later 8th Duke of Rutland, and his wife Violet, an aristocrat and artist. She was the fourth of the five children they raised together.
Lady Violet's mother was a member of The Souls. Lady Violet's first marriage was one of at least seven unions between children of Souls' families. Her brother John was an art expert who became the 9th Duke of Rutland, and her sister Diana was an actor, author, and socialite.

First marriage and issue

She married Hugo Francis 'Ego' Charteris, the son of Hugo Charteris, 11th Earl of Wemyss and Mary Constance Wyndham on 1 February 1911. The wedding was held at St Margaret's Westminster, reported in The Times, and the reception at 10 Arlington St, London.
The couple had two children:
Hugo held a commission in the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars, and served in the First World War, with the rank of Captain. He was killed at the Battle of Katia near the Suez Canal in Egypt on 23 April 1916 and is commemorated on the Jerusalem Memorial, and, with his brother Yvo, on the village war memorial at Stanway.

Second marriage and issue

She married Guy Holford Benson, son of Robert Henry 'Robin' Benson, on 9 July 1921.
The couple had three children:
Guy Benson was a partner in Robin Benson & co, and a Director of London Assurance.

Death

Violet Benson died on 23 December 1971 and is buried in the churchyard at Stanway, Gloucestershire, with her second husband, next to her second son, Martin. The church is adjacent to the Charteris residence in England, Stanway House.