The Byrnes became active philanthropists in
London and
Sussex, assisting war widows and refugees, often in partnership with the Catholic church. In 1955, they gave the use of a rented house in Redburn Street,
Chelsea, as a home for war widows, and helped
Leonard Cheshire found St Bridget's Cheshire Home at
East Preston, West Sussex. The following year they took over Gerston House,
Storrington, West Sussex, a former residence of the
Bishop of Arundel, as a refugee home. In 1960, they founded the
Catholic Building Society to assist people on low incomes, including lone women. In 1972, Nona Byrne became Chairman of the Society, the first woman to chair a building society and the first woman to address the
Building Societies Association. Nona was a firm defender of the role of building societies, criticising government policies that she saw as diverting savings or undermining life assurance. Nona Byrne retired from the board of the Catholic Building Society at its AGM in April 1997. At the same time, she was made a Dame of the papal
Order of St. Gregory the Great, presented by the Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster,
Patrick O'Donoghue. Nona Byrne died at home in
Chichester on 31 October 2012, and was buried at
Our Lady of Consolation,
West Grinstead. ==References==