John Albert Edward William Spencer-Churchill, 10th Duke of Marlborough (18 September 1897 – 11 March 1972), styled Marquess of Blandford until 1934, was a British Army officer and peer.
The son of the 9th Duke of Marlborough and Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan, he opened his ancestral home of Blenheim Palace to the public in 1950 and is known as a pioneer of the "stately homes" business.
Early life
thumb|Portrait of Blandford, centre, with his parents and younger brother by [[John Singer Sargent, 1905.]]
Blandford was born 18 September 1897 at Spencer House in St James's, London. He was the elder son and heir of Charles, 9th Duke of Marlborough, and his first wife, American railroad heiress Consuelo Vanderbilt. His parents, without a permanent London home of their own, had been leasing Spencer House from the Earl Spencer, but his mother felt it was appropriate as the Earls Spencer were descended from the 1st Duke of Marlborough.
He was christened at the Chapel Royal at St James's Palace with Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later Edward VII), as his godfather. He was named John Albert Edward William, after the 1st Duke of Marlborough, the Prince of Wales, and his maternal grandfather, William Kissam Vanderbilt. From birth, he held the title Marquess of Blandford by courtesy and was known to family and friends as "Bert".
His younger brother Lord Ivor Spencer-Churchill was born in 1898. Their mother famously referred to the brothers as "the heir and the spare". His parent's marriage was an unharmonious arranged marriage of convenience. They separated in 1906 and divorced in 1921. Later that year his mother remarried French aviator Jacques Balsan and his father remarried American socialite Gladys Deacon.
Blandford was educated at Eton College before joining the Life Guards. He served with distinction as a captain in the Guards in France and Belgium during World War I.
Career
On 30 June 1934, his father died and he succeeded as 10th Duke of Marlborough. He moved his family to Blenheim Palace, the palatial seat of the dukes of Marlborough in Woodstock, Oxfordshire. In 1936, he was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Oxfordshire. From 1937 to 1942, he served as mayor of Woodstock. His first wife would later serve as the first female mayor of the town.
In 1950, Marlborough opened the grounds and some rooms of Blenheim Palace (including the bedroom where his first cousin once removed Sir Winston Churchill was born) to the public to help defray the cost of upkeep. He is considered as one of the originators of the "stately homes" business. They had five children:
- Lady Sarah Consuelo Spencer-Churchill (1921–2000)
- Lady Caroline Spencer-Churchill (1923–1992), she married Major Charles Huguenot Waterhouse (1918–2007) in 1946.
- John George Vanderbilt Henry Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of Marlborough (1926–2014)
- Lady Rosemary Mildred Spencer-Churchill (born 1929)
- Lord Charles George William Colin Spencer-Churchill (1940–2016), he married, firstly, Gillian Spreckels Fuller (born 1946) in 1965, they divorced in 1968. He married, secondly, he married Elizabeth Jane Wyndham (born 1948) in 1970.
His first wife died in 1961. On 26 January 1972, six weeks before his own death, Marlborough married his second wife, Laura Canfield (née Charteris), widow of the American publishing heir Michael Temple Canfield (whose first wife had been Caroline Lee Bouvier), at Caxton Hall. Canfield was the second daughter of the Hon. Guy Lawrence Charteris (the second son of the 11th Earl of Wemyss. She had previously married to and divorced from the 2nd Viscount Long and the 3rd Earl of Dudley.
Residences
As a wedding present, Lord Blandford's mother Consuelo, Duchess of Marlborough, transferred the lease of her London home at No. 1 Portman Square to him. Lord and Lady Blandford continued to maintain No. 1 Portman Square as their London home until May 1928, when they took a new lease of No. 27 Hill Street from the Grosvenor Estate. During the 1920s and early 1930s, Lord and Lady Blandford also maintained a country residence at Lowesby Hall in Leicestershire.
Following the death Blandford's father, the 9th Duke of Marlborough, in June 1934, Blandford succeeded as 10th Duke and inherited the family's ancestral Oxfordshire seat Blenheim Palace. The new Duke and Duchess moved to Blenheim, and Lowesby Hall was sold to Sir Edmund Keith Nuttall, 2nd Baronet. The lease on No. 27 Hill Street was sold in October 1936, and in November of the same year, the Duke purchased the Crown Lease of a large, standalone London mansion at No. 11 Kensington Palace Gardens from Sir Malcolm Perks, 2nd Bt. No. 11 Kensington Palace Gardens remained as the Marlborough's London residence until the outbreak of World War II in 1939.
During the War the house was requisitioned by the British Army. The Duke later sold his lease of Np. 11 Kensington Palace Gardens to the French Government in September 1946 for £25,000, and the house became the Official Residence of the French Ambassador to the United Kingdom.
Death
The Duke died at a hospital in London on 11 March 1972 at the age of 74. He was succeeded by his elder son John, Marquess of Blandford. He and his first wife are buried in the churchyard of St Martin's Church, Bladon.
