At a party at
Blenheim Palace,
Patsy Cornwallis-West asked the Prince of Wales (later King
Edward VII) to convince
Hugh Grosvenor, 2nd Duke of Westminster to marry her daughter. The pair were married on 16 February 1901 and moved into
Grosvenor House on
Park Lane, a mansion that the Duke had inherited from his grandfather. Later they lived together at
Eaton Hall, Cheshire. Together, they had three children: • Lady Ursula Mary Olivia Grosvenor (1902–1978), whose descendants are the only descendants of the Duchess and the Duke. • Edward George Hugh Grosvenor, Earl Grosvenor (1904–1909), who died young. •
Lady Mary Constance Grosvenor (1910–2000), who never married and became a motor racing and rally driver. The marriage was happy at first, and the couple shared many interests, including yachting and motor racing. However, her parents' expectation of personal financial gain through the marriage and her own long absence from home affected her marriage to the conservative Duke. In 1909, the couple's only son and heir apparent to the dukedom died following an operation for
appendicitis while the Duchess was away. The Duke accused her of neglecting the child, and the Duchess did not attend the boy's funeral. In 1918, the Duchess was created a Commander of the
Order of the British Empire for her service in the war. The couple were divorced – on the grounds of the Duke's adultery and desertion – the following year, with the decree being made absolute 19 December 1919. After their divorce, the Duke married three more times, including to Violet Cripps, Baroness Parmoor,
Loelia, Lady Lindsay, and
Anne Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster. The couple remained on friendly terms after 1919, hosting their daughters'
debut balls together. Because their subsequent interactions were amicable, it has been surmised that both parties collaborated to achieve the divorce because each wanted to end the marriage and remarry.
Second marriage , Old Churchyard – plaque commemorating Constance Edwina (née Cornwallis-West, 1877−1970) On 14 January 1920, less than one month after her divorce from the duke was finalized, Constance Lewis, then aged 44, secretly married her private secretary, Captain John Fitzpatrick Lewis, then in his thirties, at
Lyndhurst, Hampshire. She had met Lewis early in the war, while he was being treated at her hospital in Le Touquet. They had no children. The former duchess died on 21 January 1970, aged 94. ==In popular culture==