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El Paso Evening Post, Texas, February 29, 1928
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El Paso Evening Post, Texas, February 29, 1928
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The News-Herald, Franklin, Pennsylvania, September 8, 1924
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York, July 31, 1924
What this article fails to mention is that Lois Sturt supposedly had a passenger in the car when she was pulled over - the Prince of Wales, future King Edward VIII.
The lower image, from the Springfield Missouri Republican, August 31, 1924, shows the future king playing “Chasing Clues” and slumming with a Tallulah Bankhead.
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 11, 1936
The day after King Edward VIII’s abdication.
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 10, 1936
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 9, 1936
Crowds protest the day before King Edward VIII submitted his abdication.
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 8, 1936
Two days before King Edward VIII’s abdication papers were signed.
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 8, 1936
(Two days before Edward’s abdication was submitted.)
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The Evening Sun, Hanover, Pennsylvania, December 4, 1936
(Six days later King Edward VIII submitted his abdication to parliament so he could marry Wallis.)
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The Daily Advance, Elizabeth City, North Carolina, April 4, 1922
They Make A Fine Couple - But Which?
1) Lady Doris Gordon-Lennox, daughter of the Earl of and Countess of March and granddaughter of the Duke of Richmond.
2) Lady Elizabeth Bowes Lyon, daughter of the Earl of Strathmore, descendant of one of England’s wealthiest families.
3) Lady Diana Bridgeman, who’s only 14, but who nevertheless has long been reckoned as a likely match for the prince.
4) Lady Mary Thynne, third daughter of the Earl of Bath, who is 19 and whose last name is pronounced as if “Tin”.
Announcement of the Price of Wales’ engagement is expected to follow promptly his return from abroad to England. Four young women are mentioned as possibilities, and they are shown here, each with the prince.
Edward didn’t marry until 15 years after the publication of this story. All four of these ladies were bridesmaids at Edward’s sister Mary’s wedding in February 1922, which is probably where the reporter got the idea for the article. The fourth lady, Lady Mary Beatrice Thynne, was bridesmaid to the second lady, Elizabeth, when she married Edward’s brother Albert the next year (1923). Albert would become King George VII when Edward, as King Edward VIII, abdicated and married Wallis Simpson in 1937 and became the Duke of Windsor. Elizabeth, lady number two, was the mother of Queen Elizabeth II.
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The Decatur Daily Review, Illinois, April 18, 1937
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The Decatur Daily Review, Illinois, October 18, 1936
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The Decatur Daily Review, Illinois, May 11, 1937
The Duke of Windsor, once destined to be crowned in London tomorrow, waits quietly in France with the woman for whom he gave up the throne, until after the coronation to announce the date for their wedding.
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London, December 10, 1937
According to this article, Wallis Simpson was ranked 29th lady of the land, although her husband was the 4th gentleman of the land; however, a Time Magazine article published December 20th, 1937 stated that:
Exactly one year after Edward VIII’s abdication appeared last week a new edition of Burke’s Peerage, ranking the Duchess of Windsor in England as the 33rd Lady in the Land, ranking the Duke 4th (i.e., after his three brothers). It was next discovered last week that the new Debrett’s Peerage, an equally standard work, ranks the Duchess as 8th Lady. Consulted about this discrepancy, the Royal College of Arms this week inclined to agree with Debrett’s, but weaseled by declaring “only the King is able to state the exact position.”
But this article, from the Winnipeg Tribune, December 17, 1937 states:


