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Published March 2025. The Deeds of King Henry V, or in Latin Henrici Quinti, Angliæ Regis, Gesta, is a first-hand account of the Agincourt Campaign, and subsequent events to his death in 1422. The author of the first part was a Chaplain in King Henry's retinue who was present from King Henry's departure at Southampton in 1415, at the siege of Harfleur, the battle of Agincourt, and the celebrations on King Henry's return to London. The second part, by another writer, relates the events that took place including the negotiations at Troye, Henry's marriage and his death in 1422.

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Biography of Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough 1859-1936

Paternal Family Tree: Anderson

Maternal Family Tree: Anne Sara Thellusson 1774-1849

On 03 Aug 1858 [his father] Charles Anderson-Pelham 3rd Earl Yarborough (age 23) and [his mother] Victoria Alexandrina Hare were married. She the daughter of [his grandfather] William Hare 2nd Earl Listowel and [his grandmother] Maria Augusta Windham Countess Listowel (age 53). He the son of [his grandfather] Charles Anderson-Pelham 2nd Earl Yarborough (age 49) and [his grandmother] Maria Adelaide Maude Countess Yarborough (age 43).

On 11 Jun 1859 Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough was born to Charles Anderson-Pelham 3rd Earl Yarborough (age 24) and Victoria Alexandrina Hare.

On 06 Feb 1875 [his father] Charles Anderson-Pelham 3rd Earl Yarborough (age 40) died. His son Charles (age 15) succeeded 4th Earl Yarborough, 5th Baron Yarborough.

On 05 Aug 1886 Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 27) and Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 22) were married. She by marriage Countess Yarborough. He the son of Charles Anderson-Pelham 3rd Earl Yarborough and Victoria Alexandrina Hare.

On 14 Aug 1887 [his son] Charles Pelham was born to Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 28) and [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 23).

On 24 Aug 1888 [his father-in-law] Sackville George Lane-Fox 15th Baron Darcy of Knayth 12th Baron Conyers (age 60) died. Baron Conyers and Baron Darcy of Knayth abeyant between his two daughters [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 24) and [his sister-in-law] Violet Ida Evelyn Lane-Fox Countess Powis (age 23).

On 17 Dec 1888 [his son] Sackville Pelham 5th Earl of Yarborough was born to Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 29) and [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 25).

Around Dec 1890 George Herbert 4th Earl Powis (age 28) and [his sister-in-law] Violet Ida Evelyn Lane-Fox Countess Powis (age 25) were married.

On 07 May 1891 Edward Herbert 3rd Earl Powis (age 72) died unmarried at 45 Berkeley Square, Mayfair. He was buried in St Mary's Church, Welshpool. His nephew George (age 28) succeeded 4th Earl Powis. [his sister-in-law] Violet Ida Evelyn Lane-Fox Countess Powis (age 26) by marriage Countess Powis.

In 1892 D'Arcy Francis Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 32) and [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 28).

The London Gazette 26321. St. James's Palace, August 25, 1892.

The Queen (age 73) has been pleased to make the following appointments in Her Majesty's Household:-

Charles Robert, Lord Carrington (age 49), G.C.M.G., to be Lord Chamberlain of Her Majesty's Household, in the room of Edward, Earl of Lathom (age 54), G.C.B., resigned.

The Honourable Charles Robert Spencer (age 34), M.P., to be Vice Chamberlain of Her Majesty's Household, in the room of Henry George, Lord Burghley (age 42), M.P., resigned.

George William Henry, Lord Vernon (age 38), to be Captain of Her Majesty's Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, in the room of Charles Alfred Worsley, Earl of Yarborough (age 33), resigned.

William, Lord Kensington (age 57), to be Captain of Her Majesty's Guard of Yeoman of the Guard, in the room of William, Earl of Limerick (age 52), K.P., resigned.

In 1893 [his son] Marcus Herbert Pelham 6th Earl of Yarborough was born to Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 33) and [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 29).

In 1903 [his sister-in-law] Violet Ida Evelyn Lane-Fox Countess Powis (age 38) abeyance terminated 16th Baroness Darcy of Knayth.

The Times. 22 Jun 1910. LORD ACHESON (age 33) AND MISS CARTER (age 22).

The marriage of Viscount Acheson, elder son of the Earl (age 68) and Countess of Gosford (age 54), and Miss Mildred Carter, only daughter of Mr. J. Ridgely Carter (age 46), American Minister to Rumania, and Mrs. Ridgely Carter (age 45), took place yesterday at St. George's, Hanover-square. The Sub-Dean of the Chapels Royal (the Rev. Edgar Sheppard, D.D.) performed the ceremony, assisted by the Rev. David Anderson and other clergy, and Mr. Ridgely Carter gave his daughter away. She wore a very simple wedding gown of soft white satin with a long train draped with old point de Venise, and a Venetian lace cap over a spray of myrtle and orange blossom, covered by a plain tulle veil. Master David Stanley, Master Julian Ward, and Miss Diana Roberts, dressed all in white, followed the bride, and there were seven bridesmaids, Lady Theo Acheson (age 28) (sister of the bridegroom), Lady Victoria Stanley, Mlle. Irene deo La Grange, Miss Canilla Morgan, the Hon. Rhoda Astley, Miss Elsie Nicholl, and Miss Marian Scranton, who wore white chiffon dresses with draped bodices and wreaths of myrtle beneath tulle veils. They also wore diamond neckislides and carried loose bunches of red roses. The Hon. Patrick Acheson (age 26) was best man to his brother.

Mrs. Ridgely Carter afterwards held a large reception at Dorchester House (lent by the American Ambassador and Mrs. Whitelaw Reid), and among the many who came on from the church were the French, Russian, German, Spanish, and Italian Ambassadors, the Danish Minister, tho Rumanian Minister, the Swedish Minister and Countess Wrangel, Mme. Dominguez, the Servian Charge d'Affaires and Mme. Grouitel, the Chilian Minister and Mme. Gana, the Belgian Minister and Countess de Lalaing, the Duke (age 63) and Duchess of Somerset (age 57), Katharine Duchess of Westminster (age 53) and Lady Helen Grosvenor (age 22), Prince and Princess Alexis Dolgorouki, the Marquis and Marchioness of Hamilton, the Marchioness of Tweeddale, the Marquis (age 48) and Marchioness of Salisbury (age 42), the Marchioness of Anglesey (age 26), the [his sister-in-law] Countess of Powis (age 45), the Earl (age 56) and Countess of Chesterfield, the Countess of Kintore and Lady Hilda Keith-Falconer, the Earl and Countess of Gosford, Prince and Princess Frederick Liechtenstein, the Countess of Kimberley, Countess Grey, the Marquis d'Hautpoul, the Countess of Leicester (age 54) and Lady Bridget Coke (age 19), the Earl (age 41) and Countess of Craven (age 38), the Earl of Desart, Countess Fritz Hochberg, the Earl and Countess of Meath, the Countess of Bilmorey, the Countess of Londesborough (age 49) and Lady Irene Denison (age 19), the Earl and Countess of Derby (age 70), the Earl (age 51) and Countess of Yarborough, Ellen Lady Inchiquin and the Hon Lilah O'Brien, Lord and Lady Charles Beresford, Lord and Lady Leith of Fyvie, Lady Saltoun, Baroness Nunburnholme (age 30), Baroness Newborough, Sir John and Lady Lister-Raye, Lord and Lady Monson, Lord and Baroness Savile, Lady Rothschild, Viscount and Viscountess AIdleton, Lady Alexander Paget, Lady Harcourt, Lady Desborough, Lord Suffield, Sir Herbert and Lady Jekyll and Miss Jekyll, the Hon. Sir Francis and Baroness Ufford and Miss Viliers, Lady Heien Vincent, Lord Knaresborough and the Hon. Helen Meysey-Thompson, Lady Pauncefote, Lord and Lady Weardale, Lady Grace Baring, Lord Strathcona, Lady Margaret Graham and Miss Graham, Sir Francis and Lady Channing, Mary Baroness Gerard, Baroness Manners and the Hon. Misses Manners, Lady Edward Cavendish, Mme. Langenbach, Lord Revelstoke, the Countess of Bessborough (age 84) and Ladv Gweneth Ponsonby (age 22), Lord Aberdare and the Hon. Eva Bruce, the Hon. Harry and Mrs. Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Martin, Mrs. F. Vanderbilt, Mrs. Arthur James, Mrs. Walter Burns, Mrs. Lewis Harcourt, Mrs. Lowther and Miss Lokther, Mine. Vagliano, Captain and Mrs. Clonman, Miss Ralli, Mr. William Giuett, Mrs: Hwfa Williams, the Hon. Mrs. Derek Keppel, Mr. William Phillips, Mrs. Frank D'Arcy, the Hon. Lady Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Sassoon, Sir Bartle Frere, Mme. de Bille, Mrs. Featherstonhaugh, Mrs. Cotton Jodrell, Mrs. Frank Mackay, the Hon. Urs. Charles Lawrence, the Hon. Mrs. Rochfort Maguire, Lady Barrymore, Mrs. Chauncey, and Mrs. Ronalds.

Lord and Lady Acheson left later in the afternoon for the Continent, the bride travelling in a dress of grey chiffon and a large hat swathed in tulle to match the dress.

A list of the principal wedding presents was published in The Times yesterday.

On 31 Jan 1911 [his son] Charles Pelham (age 23) and [his daughter-in-law] Alexandra Vivian (age 20) were married. She the sister of the wife [Dorothy Maud Vivian (age 31)] of Field Marshal Douglas Haig 1st Earl Haig (age 49). He the son of Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 51) and [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 47).

On 30 Oct 1914 at Zandvoorde during the he First Battle of Ypres.

[his son] Charles Pelham (age 27) [Lord Worsley] was killed in action. His wife, [his daughter-in-law] Alexandra Vivian (age 24), who did not remarry, subsequently purchased the land in the town of Zandvoorde in which he was buried. Following his re-interrment at the Town Cemetery Military Extension at Ypre in 1921, the land became the site of the Household Cavalry Memorial.

Hugh William Grosvenor (age 30) was killed in action.

Gerald Ernest Francis Ward (age 36) was killed in action His body was never recovered and he is commemorated at the Menin Gate.

Charles Petty-Fitzmaurice (age 40) was killed in action.

The 1st Life Guard's war diary noted the action at Zandvoorde -[7]

Zandvoorde-Oct 30 6am Heavy bombardment of position opened. At 7.30am position was attacked by large force of infantry. This attack proved successful owing to greatly superior numbers. Regiment retired in good order about 10.00am except C Squadron on the left flank from which only about ten men got back. Remainder of Squadron missing. Also one machine gun put out of action.

Worsley was in command of the Machine Gun section of the Royal Horse Guards defending the area around Zandvoorde to the East of Ypres. They had come under overwhelming pressure and most of the unit had been withdrawn and replaced by 1st Life Guards in which Hugh Grosvenor served. However the MG section, being essential to the defence of the line was retained in the front line along with its crew, led by Lord Worsley. The events concerning the death of both men are discussed in "1914 - The Days of Hope" by Lyn McDonald. Worsley was not the image of the spit and polish of the Household Brigade. He was covered in mud and had not shaved for a week having been subject to continual attacks by the German elite troops ranged against them. He wrote home that his last shave "was all the washing I've had time for in the last ten days". The incoming Life Guards had one Machine Gun inoperative so Worsley's gun was retained as it covered a vital section of the line. His team were tired and hungry having missed out on a meal during the relief by the 1st Life Guards, who had already consumed their own rations whilst moving up to the line and could not help their brothers in arms. However a timely parcel arrived from Worsley's mother containing chocolate which was shared equally amongst the MG team. They remained in position for six days and nights in appalling weather and under attack by overwhelming numbers. Their trench was shallow, and dug on the forward slope before Zandvoorde in full view of the Germans. It was clear to Hugh Grosvenor that the position was exposed and that the Germans were massing for another attack. Grosvenor sent the following message to his HQ "There appears to be a considerable force of the enemy to my front and to my right front. They approach to within about seven hundred yards at night. Our shells have not been near them on this flank". What remained unsaid was that the German artillery certainly had the range of the British trenches and had delivered significant quantities of shellfire, clearly with little reply.

The morning of 30th November dawned as the eighth consecutive day that Worsley's MG team had spent in the line. At 06.00hrs the German barrage started and it was intense. For 90 minutes there was little that the British could do but deal with their battered trenches and their wounded. Worsley's team had to cover their vital Machine Gun with their bodies to protect it from mud and dirt - they well knew that when the shelling stopped they would need it in full working order. When the shelling stopped and the Germans advanced it was over in minutes. An official report confirmed that "the (German) attack proved successful owing to greatly superior numbers" and that the Regiment had "retired in good order". Not all had retired in good order. Hugh Grosvenor and Charles Worsley were occupied in dealing with Germans swarming over their trenches and firing on them at close range and soon it came down to hand to hand fighting. The inevitable conclusion soon came. One man retiring looked back and saw Worsley still standing, firing at the enemy about to overwhelm the trench. There was nobody left alive to tell the tale of the final moments. There were no British wounded. There were no prisoners taken. A cavalry squadron, fighting as dismounted infantry, had simply ceased to exist. By 08.30 news that the 7th Cavalry Brigade had been pushed off the Zandvoorde ridge reached 1st Corps HQ. Perhaps the Commander, General Sir Douglas Haig, took a moment to spare a thought for Worsley who was married to Haig's wife's younger sister.

There was a postscript. The German unit that captured Worsley's trench was the 1st Bavarian Jaeger Regiment and one of its officers found the bodies and on searching them for papers found that Worsley was a Lord. He ordered that any personal effects, including a gold ring should be taken from the body and returned to Worsley's family. Unfortunately the German officer was himself killed a few days later and the effects never found their way back to England. All of the British bodies were buried in a mass grave which remains unfound to this day and all are commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial. All but one; Worsley's body was given a separate burial and via neutral Holland the German authorities passed information of its location. After the war it was located and is now buried in Ypres Town Cemetery Extension, just yards from that of another aristocratic Freemason HRH Prince Maurice of Battenberg. The land where Worsley's body was found was purchased by his wife and now is the site of the Household Division Memorial. Lyn McDonalds book includes photos of Worsley and his wife at the quayside before his embarkation to France and also his temporary grave marker.

On 17 Nov 1926 [his wife] Marcia Amelia Mary Lane-Fox Countess Yarborough (age 63) died. Her son [his son] Sackville (age 37) succeeded 14th Baron Conyers, 8th Baron Fauconberg.

On 07 Mar 1927 [his mother] Victoria Alexandrina Hare died.

In 1935 Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 75) was appointed 881st Knight of the Garter by King George V of the United Kingdom (age 69).

On 12 Jul 1936 Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough (age 77) died. His son [his son] Sackville (age 47) succeeded 5th Earl Yarborough, 6th Baron Yarborough.

Royal Ancestors of Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough 1859-1936

Kings Wessex: Great x 28 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings Gwynedd: Great x 25 Grand Son of Owain "Great" King Gwynedd

Kings Seisyllwg: Great x 31 Grand Son of Hywel "Dda aka Good" King Seisyllwg King Deheubarth

Kings Powys: Great x 26 Grand Son of Maredudd ap Bleddyn King Powys

Kings England: Great x 21 Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Kings Scotland: Great x 27 Grand Son of King Duncan I of Scotland

Kings Franks: Great x 25 Grand Son of Louis VII King Franks

Kings France: Great x 28 Grand Son of Robert "Pious" II King France

Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 33 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine

Ancestors of Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough 1859-1936

Great x 4 Grandfather: Francis Anderson of Manby 15 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Francis Anderson of Manby 16 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 2 Grandfather: Charles Anderson-Pelham 1st Baron Yarborough 17 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 1 Grandfather: Charles Anderson-Pelham 1st Earl Yarborough 18 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: George Aufrère

Great x 2 Grandmother: Sophia Aufrère

GrandFather: Charles Anderson-Pelham 2nd Earl Yarborough 19 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Father: Charles Anderson-Pelham 3rd Earl Yarborough 20 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

GrandMother: Maria Adelaide Maude Countess Yarborough

Great x 2 Grandfather: Patrick Craufurd Bruce of Taplow Lodge in Buckinghamshire

Great x 1 Grandmother: Jane Crawfurd Bruce

Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson 4th Earl Yarborough 21 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Richard Hare

Great x 2 Grandfather: William Hare 1st Earl Listowel

Great x 1 Grandfather: Richard Lysaght Hare

GrandFather: William Hare 2nd Earl Listowel

Great x 3 Grandfather: Luke Dillon

Great x 2 Grandfather: Robert Dillon 1st Baron Clonbrook

Great x 1 Grandmother: Catherine Dillon

Mother: Victoria Alexandrina Hare

Great x 1 Grandfather: Vice Admiral William Lukin Windham

GrandMother: Maria Augusta Windham Countess Listowel

Great x 2 Grandfather: Pierre Thellusson

Great x 1 Grandmother: Anne Sara Thellusson