On April 29, 1924, The Cecils were descendants of
William Cecil. The nationally renowned organist from St. Louis
Charles Henry Galloway played organ at the wedding. They divorced in 1934. Cornelia Vanderbilt and Cecil were the parents of two sons: •
George Henry Vanderbilt Cecil (1925–2020), who married Nancy Owen (1930–2016). •
William Amherst Vanderbilt Cecil (1928–2017), who married Mary Lee Ryan (1931–2017), a first cousin of
First Lady Jackie Kennedy, as their mothers,
Janet Norton Lee and Marion Merritt Lee, were sisters. Around 1932, reportedly finding life at Biltmore too dull, she moved to New York City to briefly study art, leaving her husband to manage Biltmore. After her 1934 move abroad, she never returned to Biltmore or the United States again. After Paris, she moved to
London, where she met and married Captain
Vivian Francis Bulkeley-Johnson (1891–1968) in October 1949. Bulkeley-Johnson, the
aide-de-camp to the
9th Duke of Devonshire when he was the
Governor General of Canada from 1916 to 1918, served in the offices of the
Imperial War Cabinet in
World War I and in the
Air Ministry. They remained married until his death in 1968. One evening as she was having dinner with
Edward Adamson in London, Cornelia met William Robert "Bill" Goodsir, their waiter with whom she fell in love. In 1972, Cornelia married for the third and final time to Goodsir (1926–1984), who was 26 years younger than she was. She was a friend and supporter of Adamson, the pioneer of
Art Therapy, and tried unsuccessfully to fund his post at
Netherne Hospital, and the Adamson Collection through her Mrs Smith Trust (correspondence in Edward Adamson Archive at the
Wellcome Library). Cornelia died on February 7, 1976, aged 75, in
Oxford,
England. Her ashes were placed at a church near her home, The Mount, a farm in the village of Churchill in
Oxfordshire, near
Kingham. == Legacy ==