As a girl, she was a member of the
White Heather Club,
the first women's cricket club, founded in 1887 at
Nun Appleton Hall near
Appleton Roebuck, Yorkshire. Stanley Baldwin met her while staying with his cousins, who were her neighbours, at Rottingdean, and reportedly fell in love with her while watching her score a
half-century in a cricket match. She scored her career-best average of 62 in the year leading up to their marriage. She was also a competent
billiards player. Apart from her home-making and raising of six children, she was active and sociable, quite different from her husband in nature. Unlike her husband, she preferred the city life of London to the country. Their daughter Margaret Huntington-Whiteley said, "two people could not have been more unlike", but that "should they ever differ, it was always done quietly and politely." They shared the same deep
Christian faith and moral outlook, and she was very supportive and encouraging of her husband. She often travelled with her husband during his time as prime minister, and she was an excellent speaker who found her own voice in politics. Her work contributed to the passage of the
Midwives Act 1936. (See
Royal College of Midwives.) ==Death==