In addition to the WVS, she also established Women's Home Industries, a highly successful exponent of British craft and cultural traditions in clothing and textiles, and also a prolific exporter to the United States and Canada.
She served on boards of various cultural bodies, including the BBC Advisory Board and Glyndebourne, and was a keen early supporter of University of Sussex.
In 1958, she became the first woman to take a seat in the House of Lords in her own right.
A 1963 profile in The Observer said: "the W.V.S.
has brought out in her the latent political talent and the strength of character that once induced someone to say of her that had she been a man she would have become Prime Minister".
Author: Women's Voluntary Service (publisher/sponsor), Unknown (artist), Multi Machine Plates, London (printer), Her Majesty's Stationery Office (publisher/sponsor) Source: