John Davies Knatchbull LloydOBE (28 April 1900 – 13 December 1978), generally known as J. D. K. Lloyd or The Widow Lloyd, was an antiquarian researcher, public servant and notable figure in the memoirs of many of the notable figures of the twentieth century, including
Evelyn Waugh and
Anthony Powell.
Early life and education
Lloyd was born on 28 April 1900, in Kensington, London, the elder son of
John Maurice Edward Lloyd (1844-1910), M.A., a barrister of
Lincoln's Inn, and Alice Norton (d. 1906), daughter of Major-General Charles Stirling Dundas, son of the 26th Chief of
Clan Dundas. Her mother, Mary Louisa, was daughter of
Sir Norton Joseph Knatchbull, 10th Baronet.[1] The Lloyd family had lived in the town of Montgomery for centuries, descending from Maurice Lloyd, Capital Bailiff of Montgomery in 1686.[2] Lloyd's younger brother, Wyndham Edward Buckley Lloyd (1901-1980),
F.R.C.S.,
L.R.C.P., was a physician and writer on medical history.[3]
He received the nickname 'the Widow' in reference to a shaving lotion, 'The Widow Lloyd's Euxesis'. Lloyd's name appears in conjunction with this nickname in the journals and letters of many of his contemporaries for decades afterward.[7][8] Lloyd spent his life devoted to antiquarian research and in public service to his community.
Public service career
1929-1946: Secretary of the council for the preservation of rural Wales.
1957-1974: Chairman of the Montgomeryshire County library Committee
1957: Awarded OBE
1960: Deputy Lieutenant of the county of Powys
1967-1974: A Commissioner on the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales
1969: Honorary LLD from the University of Wales
Mayor of Montgomery: 1932-1938 and 1961–1962
Member of the Historic Buildings Council for Wales
Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
J. D. K. Lloyd wrote many articles and guides to Montgomery. He donated
Dolforwyn Castle to the Welsh Ancient Monument Board (now
Cadw) in 1955.[10][11]
On the death of his uncle William Llewellyn Lloyd in 1925, Lloyd took over as head of the family, which appeared in
Burke's Landed Gentry as "of Plas Trefaldwyn" and later "formerly of Castell Forwyn", the latter reflecting Lloyd's sale of that house in 1948 (retaining the estate) to live at Bryn Cadwrfa.[12]