Elizabeth Clare "Betty" Hanley (December 24, 1915-2002) was a lampshade designer who served as the official lamp curator for the Royal Family of England and for all of Buckingham Palace. Originally a Michigander, she spent much of her childhood in France and also a Swiss boarding school before attending multiple fashion design universities. Afterwards, she moved to London and formed a lampshade and lighting store that resulted in her being given a Royal warrant as lighting supplier for the Royal family. She also was noted for leasing an important cottage called The Ring on the grounds of Audley End House for multiple decades, renovating it to higher standards.

Betty Hanley
See caption
Hanley c. 1991
Born
Elizabeth Clare Hanley

(1915-12-24)December 24, 1915
Died2002(2002-00-00) (aged 86–87)
OccupationLampshade designer
Years active1949-1993
Known forLamp curator to the Royal Family

Childhood and education

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Born on December 24, 1915 in Grand Rapids, Michigan as a part of a Daughters of the American Revolution family, Hanley's early years were shaped by the involvement of her grandparents after the divorce of her parents when she was a child. Her grandmother was one of the earlier suffragettes and her grandfather a local judge, both of which influenced her views. When she was nine, she left to join her mother and aunt in France and was sent to a Swiss boarding school. She worked with her mother at the Red Cross after graduating while living with her aunt, whose connections and guests also gave Hanley multiple connections among European royalty.[1] She then went on to attend both the Parsons School of Design and Parsons Paris.[2]

Career

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After obtaining her fashion degrees, she moved to the United Kingdom in 1947[3] and established her own lampshades and other lighting fixture business in London in 1949 called Clare House.[2] She was later given a Royal warrant in 1977 to make her the official lamp and lighting supplier for Buckingham Palace and the English Royal family's private homes.[3][1] Other consistent customers of her lamp shop included the Guinness family, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, and the designer company Asprey.[4]

Personal life

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As the niece of Fern Bedaux and her husband Charles Bedaux, Hanley was given ownership of her aunt's home Château de Candé during the events of World War II due to Fern being detained in Paris. The property itself would be given over to the French government after the war, but all the items in the home were formally made Hanley's inheritance. Many of the pieces and wardrobe from the home, including historical documents and paintings, would be later distributed to the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Louvre, and to the Sworders auction house.[5]

After being given a tour of The Ring, a cottage on the grounds of the Audley End House, she decided to lease and renovate the property, having begun living there in 1963.[3][6] Her restoration of the cottage was assisted by two of her shop clients, interior designer John Beresford Fowler and architectural historian John Cornforth.[1] She was close friends with Royal interior designer Dudley Poplak.[7]

Due to her prior work with her mother, Hanley was a highly supportive volunteer for the Red Cross division in London. Also, starting in the 1980s, she was an active member of The Friends of Audley End group, frequently hosting parties and tours to raise money to support the upkeep of the Audley End house. She would leave The Ring in 1993, giving up the lease to Poplak, briefly living in a different cottage at the Audley End Village. Then, in 1998, she moved to Epping, Essex and died due to cancer in 2002.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Betty Hanley at Ring Cottage". Littlebury: a parish history: Littlebury, Littlebury Green, Catmere End and parts of Audley End. Parish of Littlebury Millennium Society. 2005. p. 234-235. ISBN 9780954391010.
  2. ^ a b Grunfeld, Nina (1984). The Royal Shopping Guide. William Morrow and Company. p. 27.
  3. ^ a b c Gumbrell, Jean (June 6, 1991). "Designer to the Royal Family". Saffron Walden Weekly News. Retrieved August 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Rogers, Madeline (March 4, 1982). "These lamps outshine them all". New York Daily News. Retrieved August 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Sworders Offers Bedaux Archive". Fine Books & Collections. April 7, 2021. Retrieved August 8, 2024.
  6. ^ Darwent, Charles (1987). "The Ring". The English Country Home. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 23-29.
  7. ^ "Dudley Poplak: Discreet designer of grand interiors for a loyal (and royal) clientele". The Times. March 29, 2005. Retrieved August 7, 2024.