She, her twin sister Elizabeth and three years younger sister Diana were raised by a Miss Coutts and seldom visited by their mother, who was busy serving as a nurse in the First World War and who appeared to have no interest in their upbringing; she would later serve as nurse in the Second World War and be awarded eight medals and an OBE.
The widowed duchess started travelling around the globe, visiting South America several times.
[3] The Duchess, who had moved back to Gloucestershire on her husband's death, died on 30 May 1990 at Frenchay Hospital, Bristol, following a stroke.
[3] In her will, she left £100,000 for improvements to the Chester historic community garden, officially reopened by her nephew Gerald, 6th Duke, in 2011, and £505,000 to charities.
[5] Sally Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster, is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's, Eccleston, near Eaton Hall, Cheshire.