The Windsors I Knew: An American Private Secretary's Memoir of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor Nassau, Bahamas 1940-1944
The Windsors I Knew: An American Private Secretary's Memoir of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor Nassau, Bahamas 1940-1944
This memoir of an American private secretary to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor provides a rare, vivid and first-hand account of their day-to-day lives during their time as Royal Governor and First-Lady of the Bahamas during World War II. It is not based upon the second-hand accounts published after the deaths of the famous and controversial royal couple. The memoir does not portray the couple as unsupportive of British war efforts as implied in the Netflix Series "The Crown". Rather, Jean D. Hardcastle-Taylor (nee Drewes) actually lived with the former British King and his American wife in Government House, Nassau, from 1940 to mid-1944. She observed her royal employers with a keen eye, and gives witness and proof of their abiding love for one another as they worked as a team (WE) to improve the living conditions of the Bahamian people while leading lead numerous projects in support of British war efforts. The author finished her 200-page original typescript about 1965 in her home in northern California, while shepherding her four children through high school. This was 20 years after she had left the Windsors in Nassau, and during a period which saw publication of many second-hand accounts of the royal couple's relationships. Most of these, particularly newspaper and magazine articles, and some books, had a loose relationship with actual facts or truth. Some were just salacious chit-chat and rumor. As she typed away over many months, she was often heard saying "I am going to set the record straight about what the Duke and Duchess of Windsor were really like". In 1968 at her eldest son's college graduation, she asked him for help in getting her work published. He said "sure Mom", but the Vietnam War and a long naval career got in the way of keeping this promise. Fortunately, Michael's wife Gloria spotted an article in the San Diego newspaper in 2009 about a large conference of The Duke and Duchess of Windsor Historical Society in nearby Coronado, where the Duchess had lived for four years (1918-1921) with her first husband, USN aviator Lt. Earl Spencer. They gathered up Jean's typescript and Bahamas-era memorabilia, and quite literally crashed the event. Michael made two presentations to the large international group and met the conference's keynote speaker, the eminent English royal historian and author Hugo Vickers, who agreed to edit the work once Michael integrated much of the author's fascinating memorabilia. The work was completed in 2016 with Hu
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This memoir of an American private secretary to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor provides a rare, vivid and first-hand account of their day-to-day lives during their time as Royal Governor and First-Lady of the Bahamas during World War II. It is not based upon the second-hand accounts published after the deaths of the famous and controversial royal couple. The memoir does not portray the couple as unsupportive of British war efforts as implied in the Netflix Series "The Crown". Rather, Jean D. Hardcastle-Taylor (nee Drewes) actually lived with the former British King and his American wife in Government House, Nassau, from 1940 to mid-1944. She observed her royal employers with a keen eye, and gives witness and proof of their abiding love for one another as they worked as a team (WE) to improve the living conditions of the Bahamian people while leading lead numerous projects in support of British war efforts. The author finished her 200-page original typescript about 1965 in her home in northern California, while shepherding her four children through high school. This was 20 years after she had left the Windsors in Nassau, and during a period which saw publication of many second-hand accounts of the royal couple's relationships. Most of these, particularly newspaper and magazine articles, and some books, had a loose relationship with actual facts or truth. Some were just salacious chit-chat and rumor. As she typed away over many months, she was often heard saying "I am going to set the record straight about what the Duke and Duchess of Windsor were really like". In 1968 at her eldest son's college graduation, she asked him for help in getting her work published. He said "sure Mom", but the Vietnam War and a long naval career got in the way of keeping this promise. Fortunately, Michael's wife Gloria spotted an article in the San Diego newspaper in 2009 about a large conference of The Duke and Duchess of Windsor Historical Society in nearby Coronado, where the Duchess had lived for four years (1918-1921) with her first husband, USN aviator Lt. Earl Spencer. They gathered up Jean's typescript and Bahamas-era memorabilia, and quite literally crashed the event. Michael made two presentations to the large international group and met the conference's keynote speaker, the eminent English royal historian and author Hugo Vickers, who agreed to edit the work once Michael integrated much of the author's fascinating memorabilia. The work was completed in 2016 with Hu
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