On 26 June 1895, aged 19, she married George Edward Stanhope Molyneux Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnarvon at
St Margaret's, Westminster. The couple had two children: •
Henry Herbert, 6th Earl of Carnarvon (1898–1987), who married
Anne Catherine Tredick Wendell and had one son, (
the 7th Earl) and one daughter. •
Lady Evelyn Leonora Almina Herbert (1901–1980), who married
Sir Brograve Campbell Beauchamp, 2nd Bt. and had a daughter. The marriage settlement also provided Almina a life annuity of £12,000, which would be payable to Lord Carnarvon in the event he outlived Almina; Rothschild also paid off Carnarvon's substantial debts prior to the wedding. and it remained on the market until after March 1930. The house was advertised as
"one of the finest small mansions in London," The hospital later moved to
Mayfair in
London. In 1919, Lady Carnarvon turned down an appointment as a Commander of the
Order of the British Empire for her war work. The Earl of Carnarvon developed an interest in
Egyptology and became the financial backer of the search for
Tutankhamun's tomb in the
Valley of the Kings,
Egypt, assisted by Almina's wealth. The Earl often wintered in Egypt. Almina accompanied him in the earlier years, but was not present in November 1922 at the opening of the newly discovered tomb. In March 1923, Lady Carnarvon travelled to Egypt to join her husband, who was seriously ill with pneumonia. He died on 5 April 1923, and Almina returned to Britain with his body later that month. She continued to provide financial support for Carter's excavation of the tomb until 1925, when she reached a settlement with the Egyptian authorities whereby she gave up any claim on the contents of the tomb in return for £36,000 compensation. The Carnarvons' only son, Henry Herbert (1898–1987), succeeded his father as sixth earl.
Second marriage In December 1923, eight months after Lord Carnarvon's death, Lady Carnarvon married Lieutenant Colonel Ian Onslow Dennistoun, a retired
Grenadier Guards officer. She reportedly provided her second husband with a £100,000 marriage settlement in order to
"surround him with the utmost dignity". In 1925, Almina was involved in a much-publicised
High Court case, known as the "Bachelor's Case", between Colonel Dennistoun and his former wife, Dorothy Dennistoun. When they had divorced, Dennistoun had been unable to pay
ancillary relief and instead had promised he would provide for his ex-wife in the future, when he had funds. After hearing about Almina's wealth, Dorothy Dennistoun demanded the alimony she had been promised. Almina saw this as blackmail and persuaded her new husband to contest the claim in the courts, in what Sir
Henry McCardie, who tried the case, called "the most bitterly conducted litigation I have ever known".
Later life After the death of Lord Carnarvon, Almina was provided with a house in the grounds of
Highclere Castle, before she and Colonel Dennistoun moved to the
Isle of Wight. Colonel Dennistoun, an
asthmatic, often suffered from poor health and died in 1938. Almina then rented a house in
Regent's Park in London, before moving in 1943 to a cottage near
Minehead in Somerset. Although she received financial support from her son, she continued to live well above her means and faced mounting debts, and in 1951 she was declared
bankrupt. Almina sold her Somerset cottage and moved to a
terraced house in
Bristol, where she lived with her housekeeper and companion Anne Leadbetter. Almina died on 8 May 1969 aged 93 at the
Frenchay Hospital,
Bristol. ==References==