Presented at court in 1905, Violet Asquith entered the social world of parties in her first
London season.
Sir Charles Tennant, 1st Baronet, Margot's father, hosted with his wife Marguerite a dance in
Grosvenor Square for Violet and his granddaughter Frances Tennant, who married in 1912 Guy Lawrence Charteris and was mother of
Ann Fleming. Guy's sister
Cynthia was one of Violet's close friends, and married her brother Herbert in 1910. In October 1907 Violet had a proposal of marriage from
Arnold Ward, a college friend of her brother Raymond. She turned it down. Sutherland suggests her parents were against the match: financial matters were probably a factor, and the Wards were Tories. Raymond Asquith belonged to
The Coterie. By 1908 this group of the younger generation was being noticed in social gossip, and a press story included Violet:
Mrs. Raymond Asquith [...] was the leading spirit of the coterie of "Young Souls" which comprised as its members
Lady Marjorie and
Lady Violet Manners, Miss Cicely Horner, Miss Violet Asquith, and Miss
Viola Tree. Violet was close to
Winston Churchill, promoted to the Liberal Cabinet in 1908: Churchill said later they were "practically engaged", and they were friends for life. He actually became engaged that year to
Clementine Hozier, whom Violet thought "as stupid as an owl". In late August, between his engagement and his marriage, Churchill spent a holiday with the Asquith family at
New Slains Castle on the Scottish coast. Some days after his departure, but while Arnold Ward remained a guest, Violet went out one evening, to look for a book left on the rocks. She was discovered after a search of several hours, lying uninjured but unconscious near the coastal path.
Michael Shelden suggests Violet's experience may have been "an unhappy young woman's cry for attention". Violet became engaged to Archibald Gordon (Archie), son of
John Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair and his wife
Ishbel in 1909, after he had had a car accident and was on what became his deathbed. ==1910–1914==