David Beatty, 2nd Earl Beatty

David Field Beatty, 2nd Earl Beatty, DSC (22 February 1905 – 10 June 1972), styled Viscount Borodale from 1919 to 1936, was a Royal Navy officer and British Conservative Party politician.

The Earl Beatty
Under-Secretary of State for Air
In office
1945–1945
Preceded byQuintin Hogg
Succeeded byJohn Strachey
Member of Parliament for Peckham
In office
27 October 1931  11 March 1936
Preceded byJohn Beckett
Succeeded byLewis Silkin
Personal details
Born
David Field Beatty

(1905-02-22)22 February 1905
Died10 June 1972(1972-06-10) (aged 67)
Political partyConservative
Spouses
Dorothy Rice Power
(m. 1937; div. 1945)
    Dorothy Rita Furey
    (m. 1946; div. 1950)
      Adelle Dillingham
      (m. 1951; div. 1958)
        Diane Kirk Blundell
        (m. 1959)
        RelationsPeter Beatty (brother)
        Ronald Tree (half-brother)
        Marshall Field (grandfather)
        Parent(s)David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty
        Ethel Field Beatty
        Alma materRoyal Naval College, Osborne
        Britannia Royal Naval College
        Military service
        AllegianceUnited Kingdom
        Branch/serviceRoyal Navy
        Years of service1918–1945
        RankCommander
        CommandsHMS Boreas (1941)
        HMS Buxton (1940–41)
        HMS Puffin (1940)
        Battles/warsSecond World War
        AwardsDistinguished Service Cross

        Early life

        Beatty was born on 22 February 1905. He was the eldest son of Admiral of the Fleet David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty and his wife Ethel. He had one brother, Peter Beatty. From his mother's first marriage to Arthur Tree (a son of Lambert Tree), he had an elder half-brother, Ronald Tree, who served as MP for Harborough and friend of Winston Churchill. Ronald was married to Nancy Keene Field (née Perkins) (widow of his first cousin Henry Field) and Marietta FitzGerald (née Peabody), a granddaughter of the Rev. Endicott Peabody.[1]

        His maternal grandfather was the American businessman Marshall Field. His father was the second son of five children born to Captain David Longfield Beatty and Katherine Edith Beatty (née Sadleir), both from Ireland: David Longfield had been an officer in the Fourth Hussars where he formed a relationship with Katrine, the wife of another officer.[2]

        Beatty was educated at the Royal Naval College, Osborne, on the Isle of Wight, and the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. In 1919, he gained the courtesy title of Viscount Borodale when his father was created Earl Beatty.

        Career

        In 1919, he gained the rank of midshipman in the service of the Royal Navy. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in 1928. He would later serve in the Leicestershire Yeomanry, part of the Territorial Army, and gained the rank of lieutenant in 1933.

        Beatty, holding the rank of lieutenant commander, was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross in 1942.[3]

        Political career

        From 1931 to 1936 he was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Peckham. His half-brother Ronald Tree also sat in Parliament at this time, as member for Market Harborough, Leicestershire. During his time in parliament he held the office of Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty from 1931 until 1936. He moved to the House of Lords when he succeeded as 2nd Earl Beatty on his father's death on 11 March 1936.[4]

        He also served as a member of the London County Council in 1937. In 1945, he served as Under-Secretary of State for Air in the Caretaker Government after the Second World War.[4]

        Personal life

        Beatty was married four times, the first three times to Americans. His first marriage was to Dorothy Carlotta (née Power) Sands on 21 April 1937, an older sister of Thomas Sarsfield Power (later the United States Army Air Forces general to direct the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan). David and Dorothy (who had previously been married to LaFrance Adelbert Mitchell, Harry Estie Reynolds Hall, and Edward Van Volkenburgh Sands) were divorced in 1945. She next married and divorced John Gordon Baragwanath and then, on 10 December 1954, she was married to Peregrine Francis Adelbert Cust, 6th Baron Brownlow, remaining married until her death in 1966.[4]

        On 7 February 1946, he remarried to Dorothy Rita (née Furey) Bragg (1918–2006), the widow of Sgt. Richard Edward Bragg RAF, and daughter of Michael James Furey of New Orleans, Louisiana. Between 1946 and 1950, she had an affair with Conservative Party leader Anthony Eden whilst he was separated from his wife. Before their divorce in 1950, they were the parents of one son:[4]

        • David Beatty, 3rd Earl Beatty (b. 1946), who married Anne Please in 1971. They divorced in 1982 and he married Anoma Corinne Wijewardene in 1984.[4]

        His third wife was Adelle (née Dillingham) O'Connor (d. 1990), the former wife of William V. O'Connor of Los Angeles, California and the daughter of M. Dillingham, of Oklahoma City. They married on 5 July 1951 and divorced in 1958 before having had one daughter:[4]

        After their divorce, Adelle married Stanley Donen in 1960.

        His fourth wife was Diane Kirk Blundell, a daughter of John Rutherford Blundell of Hayling Island in Hampshire. She was one of the last generation of debutantes to be presented to the Queen, in 1958.[5] They married on 3 December 1959 and remained married until his death. From his fourth marriage he had a son and a daughter:[4]

        Lord Beatty died on 10 June 1972 and was succeeded by his eldest son, David. After his death, Lady Beatty remarried to Sir John Nutting, 4th Baronet of Chicheley Hall, in 1973.[4]

        References

        1. Brubach, Holly (9 November 1997). "Running Around in High Circles | Others might play hard to get; Marietta Tree, this biography shows, was genuinely unattainable". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
        2. Heathcote, p. 23
        3. "No. 35729". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 October 1942. p. 4324.
        4. "Beatty, Earl (UK, 1919)". www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk. Heraldic Media Limited. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
        5. "High Society: Whatever happened to the last of the debs?". The Independent. 23 September 2006.
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