Lord Shuttleworth married Blanche Marion, daughter of
Sir Woodbine Parish, in 1871. They had two sons and four daughters (Angela, Nina,
Rachel, Lawrence, Edward and Catherine). Both his sons, Captain the Hon. Lawrence Ughtred Kay-Shuttleworth (1887–1917) and T/Captain the Hon. Edward James Kay-Shuttleworth (1890–1917) were killed in the
First World War. Lady Shuttleworth died in June 1924. Lord Shuttleworth survived her by fifteen years and died in December 1939, aged 95. He was succeeded in his titles by his grandson,
Richard Kay-Shuttleworth, 2nd Baron Shuttleworth, eldest son of the Hon. Lawrence Kay-Shuttleworth. The second baron was killed during the
Battle of Britain only eight months later, when his
Hawker Hurricane went missing during a battle over a Channel convoy, south of the
Isle of Wight. His granddaughter by his youngest daughter Catherine was
Freydis Sharland, an
Air Transport Auxiliary pilot during the Second World War and one of the first women to earn
RAF wings. Richard's younger brother,
Ronald Kay-Shuttleworth, 3rd Baron Shuttleworth, was killed in North Africa in 1942. The barony passed to Ronald's first cousin, Charles, the fourth Baron Shuttleworth. He was badly injured in the Second World War, losing one leg and the use of the other. He moved to another home,
Leck Hall at
Leck, Lancashire, on his estates, which was more convenient to his disability, leaving his aunt
Rachel to continue living at
Gawthorpe Hall until her death in 1967. The estate became a
National Trust property in 1970. ==Works==