published in
Vanity Fair in 1901. , Surrey Brodrick married first, in 1880, Lady Hilda Charteris (died 1901), daughter of
the 10th Earl of Wemyss, by whom he had five children: • Lady Muriel Brodrick (1881–1966), who married in 1901
Dudley Marjoribanks, 3rd Baron Tweedmouth (1874–1935) and left two daughters. • Lady Sybil Brodrick (1885–1935), was a
maid of honour to
Queen Mary 1911–1912, and married 1912 the diplomat Sir
Ronald William Graham (1870–1949), no children. •
George Brodrick, 2nd Earl of Midleton (1888–1979) • Lady Aileen Hilda Brodrick (1890–1970), who married in 1913 mountaineer and author
Charles Francis Meade (1881–1975), by whom she had three daughters and a son. • Lady Moyra Brodrick (1897–1982), who married in 1922 General Sir
Henry Charles Loyd (1891–1973), by who she had a son and a daughter. After the death of his first wife, Brodrick re-married at
St George's, Hanover Square on 5 January 1903, Madeleine Cecilia Carlyle Stanley (1876–1966), daughter of Colonel Hon. John Constantine Stanley (son of the
2nd Baron Stanley of Alderley) and
Mary Stewart-Mackenzie. His best man at the marriage was the Prime Minister,
Arthur Balfour, and several members of the royal family attended. Madeleine Stanley′s mother had re-married the lawyer
Sir Francis Jeune (later Baron St Helier), and her sister was married to the
Conservative MP
Augustus Henry Eden Allhusen. By this second marriage he had two sons: • Major Hon. Francis Alan Stewart-MacKenzie of Seaforth (1910-1943) who changed his name on inheriting
Brahan Castle. In 1937 he married Margaret Laetitia Lyell MBE (1912-1995) daughter of Major Hon.Charles Lyell MP. He died during the Battle of Salerno on 11 September 1943 (the day after his brother). • Major Hon. Michael Victor Brodrick MC (1920-1943). He also died at the Battle of Salerno (the day before his brother). His grandson Sir Julian St. John Loyd (by Lady Moyra) became land agent to
Queen Elizabeth II at
Sandringham. His daughter, Alexandra (Mrs Duncan Byatt), was a Lady-in-Waiting to
Diana, Princess of Wales. His sister, Marian Cecilia married Sir James Whitehead, son of the inventor
Robert Whitehead. Sir James Whitehead was to become the British Ambassador to Austria, and his niece Agathe was the first wife of
Georg von Trapp; the story of their children and his second wife,
Maria von Trapp, was the basis of the musical
The Sound of Music. Another, Albinia, became an early supporter of
Sinn Féin and became well known in Ireland under the name
Gobnait Ní Bhruadair. Another,
Edith later Mrs. Lyttleton Gell was a published author of at least 24 works, such as
The Cloud of Witness: A daily sequence of great thoughts from many minds and an autobiography,
Under Three Reigns: 1860–1944. ==Publications==