Lady Moyra Butler

In March 1938, an article about prominent debutantes in The Bystander featured a profile of Lady Moyra, and noted that she had just returned to England from a six-month stay in Germany.

The guest list reported in newspapers at the time includes multiple prominent individuals from British and American High Society during the late 1930s.

Charles' mother Lady Victoria had served as a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Mary, who sent a telegram of congratulations to Lt Weld-Forester for the occasion.

On 19 December 1947, Moyra's husband Charles sued her for divorce on the grounds that she had committed adultery with Belgian Aristocrat Guy Van Den Steen "on the continent last summer".

[11] Lady Moyra did not defend the suit, and a decree nisi was granted with costs against Count Guy van den Steen.

In the 1940s, Count Guy van den Steen inherited his family's ancestral home, the Chateau de Jehay (Jehay-Bodegnée Castle).

An accompanying article noted that Moyra and her second husband Guy owned two miniature-Chalets in Grindelwald, Switzerland, where they spent the winter season skiing and entertaining friends each year.

[15] As the sole surviving child of her parents' marriage, Moyra's inheritance would have provided her with the financial resources to assist with the restoration of the Chateau de Jehay.

In 1929 Moyra's grandmother Ellen transferred a further £15,000 to George and Sybil's marriage settlement, bringing the total amount of funds held in Trust to £46,000.

[16] The terms of the 1938 Deed of Resettlement of the Ormonde Settled Estates Trust also empowered George, Earl of Ossory to place a charge of up to £10,000 onto any children of his, other than the first-born son.

The long-lease of Ellen's London townhouse at 11 Bryanston Square was sold for £4,500 in 1953, and Moyra may have inherited a quarter share of this amount (£1,250).