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  1. Oct 17, 2005 · Ronald John McNeill married Elizabeth Maud Bolitho from Cornwall in 1884. There were three children of the marriage; Ester Rose who married twice, firstly Major McNeill and secondly Geoffrey Moss; Mary Morwenna Bolitho who married Capt. Gribble; and Loveday Violet.

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  2. village, Conservative and Unionist MP, Ronald McNeill, later Lord Cushendun (1861 – 1934), re-designed Cushendun in a style reminiscent of Cornwall, where his wife Maud came from. McNeill served as the UK representative to the League of Nations, a prelude to the United Nations, and was one of the signatories of

  3. Apr 10, 2020 · An elliptical slate tablet in the central gable is inscribed with a date and the initials ‘RMcN’ and ‘MMcN’ commemorating Ronald McNeill and his wife Maud who were largely responsible for the appearance of modern Cushendun.

  4. Ronald McNeil LCCN2014691694.jpg 4,128 × 5,748; 2.52 MB Ronald McNeil LCCN2014691694.tif 4,128 × 5,748; 22.63 MB Ronald McNeill, 1st Baron Cushendun.jpg 617 × 800; 92 KB

  5. May 3, 2022 · In 1912 Ronald McNeill hired the Welsh architect Clough Williams-Ellis to redesign the village. Williams-Ellis built a collection of houses in a distinctly Cornish style as a tribute to McNeill’s wife, Penzance-born Maud Bolitho.

  6. Family. In 1884, the future Lord Cushendun married Elizabeth Maud Bolitho (sister of William Bolitho), a Cornishwoman and Christian Scientist. [5] They had three daughters: Esther Rose, Loveday Violet, and Mary Morvenna Bolitho (who married Major Philip Le Grand Gribble, military correspondent and memoirist).

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  8. His wife Elizabeth Maud Bolitho was Cornish and this may have had some bearing on the design style produced by Clough Williams-Ellis. In 1925 the architect was again commissioned to design Mauds Cottages named after his first wife and also Glenmona House.

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