The Original Royal Rebel
Known as the original “royal rebel,” Queen Elizabeth II’s younger sister dominated the tabloids throughout the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. Princess Margaret was glamorous, sharp-tongued, and unapologetically modern in a monarchy that preferred quiet obedience.
She didn’t just bend royal rules. She tested how far they could stretch before snapping.
Born a Spare, Raised in the Spotlight
Princess Margaret Rose was born on August 21, 1930, at Glamis Castle in Scotland. She was the younger daughter of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later known as the Queen Mother). Her older sister, Elizabeth, was heir to the throne. Margaret was “the spare.”
And she never forgot it.
A Princess With Personality
From childhood, Margaret was known for her wit and stubborn streak. Winston Churchill reportedly called her “one of the most charming women in the world.” But palace insiders whispered that she could be cutting, impatient, and fiercely independent. She was not built for quiet royal life.
The War Years
During World War II, Margaret and Elizabeth stayed at Windsor Castle while London was bombed. The sisters became symbols of national morale. But even then, Margaret was said to prefer music, dancing, and a bit of mischief. She loved attention — and it loved her back.
Enter Peter Townsend
In the early 1950s, Margaret fell in love with Group Captain Peter Townsend, a decorated RAF officer and equerry to King George VI. There was one complication. Townsend was divorced. And in 1950s Britain, that was scandalous enough to shake the Church of England.
The Hand on the Jacket
In 1953, during Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, cameras caught Margaret brushing lint from Townsend’s jacket. The gesture was small, but the tabloids exploded. It confirmed what many suspected — the princess was in love.
The Church Says No
As head of the Church of England, Queen Elizabeth II could not easily approve a marriage to a divorced man whose former spouse was still living. Prime Minister Winston Churchill reportedly advised caution. The government made it clear: marriage would mean renouncing royal status.
Margaret faced an impossible choice.
The Public Statement
On October 31, 1955, Princess Margaret released a public statement. She would not marry Peter Townsend. “I have decided not to marry Group Captain Peter Townsend,” she wrote, citing her “duty to the Commonwealth.”
She was 25. The heartbreak was visible.
A Reputation Takes Shape
After Townsend left for Belgium, Margaret’s image began to shift. If she couldn’t have the life she wanted, she would enjoy the one she had. London nightlife welcomed her enthusiastically.
Enter Antony Armstrong-Jones
In 1958, Margaret met photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones at a dinner party. He was creative, charismatic, and very much not aristocracy. Margaret liked that.
A Modern Royal Wedding
On May 6, 1960, Margaret married Armstrong-Jones at Westminster Abbey. It was the first royal wedding broadcast on television. Over 300 million people reportedly watched worldwide. It felt modern. Romantic.
But appearances can be deceiving.
Lord Snowdon
In 1961, Armstrong-Jones was created Earl of Snowdon. The marriage quickly became complicated. Both were strong personalities. Both enjoyed attention. Neither enjoyed restraint.
Caribbean Escapes
The couple purchased a home on the private island of Mustique in the Caribbean. Mustique became Margaret’s sanctuary. It also became the setting for increasingly bold behavior.
The Party Princess
By the late 1960s, Margaret had developed a reputation for heavy smoking, strong drinks, and late nights. She once reportedly told a guest, “Darling, I don’t drink to forget. I drink to remember.”
The press loved it. The palace did not.
Affairs and Rumors
Both Margaret and Snowdon were rumored to have affairs. Snowdon was linked to several women. Margaret grew close to a much younger man — Roddy Llewellyn, a landscape gardener 17 years her junior.
The Photograph
In 1976, paparazzi published photographs of Margaret and Roddy Llewellyn vacationing together in Mustique. The images were intimate. The public gasped... And the monarchy braced itself.
A Royal Divorce
In 1978, Margaret and Snowdon officially divorced. It was the first divorce of a senior royal since Henry VIII’s time. The headlines were relentless.
“Disobeyed Every Rule”
A palace insider once said Margaret “disobeyed every rule except treason.” She didn’t see herself as reckless. She saw herself as alive.
The Sister Dynamic
Despite rumors of tension, Margaret remained loyal to Queen Elizabeth II. She reportedly once said, “My sister has the job. I have the fun.” The balance was delicate — and often tested.
Health and Hard Living
Years of smoking and drinking took a toll. Margaret suffered a series of strokes beginning in 1998. She underwent lung surgery in 1985 after doctors removed part of her left lung.
A Changing Monarchy
By the 1990s, royal scandals were no longer shocking. Princess Diana’s turmoil dominated headlines. Margaret, once considered outrageous, suddenly looked almost traditional.
The Final Years
Princess Margaret died on February 9, 2002, at King Edward VII’s Hospital in London, following a stroke. She was 71. Her mother died just weeks later.
The Most Scandalous Moment
But the moment that cemented Margaret’s legacy as the monarchy’s ultimate rebel was not her divorce. It was the Roddy Llewellyn photographs in 1976 — sun-drenched, unapologetic, unmistakably intimate.
A senior royal on holiday with a younger lover. No apology offered.
A Rebel With a Title
Princess Margaret never abdicated, never renounced, never apologized for being exactly who she was. She frustrated courtiers. She fascinated the public. And she forced the monarchy to confront modernity — one scandal at a time.
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Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6