Lady Fermoy was born Ruth Sylvia Gill at Dalhebity House,
Bieldside,
Aberdeenshire, daughter of Colonel William Smith Gill and Ruth (
née Littlejohn, daughter of David Littlejohn,
DL). She showed early promise as a pianist and studied under
Alfred Cortot at the
Paris Conservatoire in the 1920s. Her musical career was cut short when she met the wealthy and much older
Maurice Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy. They married on 17 September 1931 at St. Devenick's Church in
Bieldside,
Aberdeenshire. Lord and Lady Fermoy had three children: Mary Cynthia,
Frances Ruth, and
Edmund James Burke. Her daughter Frances later became the mother of
Diana, Princess of Wales. Lady Fermoy did play the piano in public occasionally after her marriage, most notably with
Josef Krips at the
Royal Albert Hall in 1950, and with
Sir John Barbirolli and the
Hallé Orchestra at
King's Lynn in 1966. She founded the King's Lynn Festival in 1951 and remained closely involved with the Festival for 25 years, persuading
Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother to become its patron. She was appointed an
Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in January 1952 for her services as Chairman of the King's Lynn Arts Festival Society. In 1956, the Queen Mother appointed Lady Fermoy an
Extra Woman of the Bedchamber. The Queen Mother, being a widow herself, showed a preference for appointing widows to her household, and four years later, Lady Fermoy was promoted to Woman of the Bedchamber, a post she held for the next 33 years. She was appointed a
Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in June 1966, and a
Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in June 1979. Lady Fermoy was a firm believer in the sanctity of marriage. In 1969, her daughter Frances and
John Spencer, Viscount Althorp, divorced after Frances left her husband for
Peter Shand Kydd. Lady Fermoy testified against her daughter, which allowed Viscount Althorp to retain custody of their children. She was also said to have counselled her granddaughter against the marriage, saying: "Darling, you must understand that their sense of humour and their lifestyle are different, and I don't think it will suit you." Lady Fermoy died at her home at 36
Eaton Square,
London, on 6 July 1993, aged 84. It was reported that she was not on speaking terms with Diana when she died. ==Ancestry==