The Earl of March was married to Miss Isabel Sophie Craven, second daughter of Mr. William George Craven, by special license, at the Chapel Royal, Savoy, on Monday. The Duke and Duchess of Teck were at the ceremony and at the wedding breakfast. The Prince and Princess of Wales's present to the bride was a star stone bracelet, the Prince's gift to the bridegroom being a gold-mounted Malacca cane.
The marriage of the Hon. and Rev. Edward Carr Glyn, M.A., Vicar of Kensington, youngest son of the late Lord Wolverton, with Lady Mary Campbell, sixth daughter of the Duke of Argyll, took place on Tuesday at St. Mary Abbott's, Kensington. The bridal route to the chancel steps was lined by non-commissioned officers and men of the Scots Guards and the 11th Hussars. The bride was conducted by her father, followed by twelve bridesmaids. The Luke and Duchess of Teck and two of their children were of the wedding party; which was entertained at breakfast at Argyll Lodge by the Duke and Duchess; the newly-married pair leaving for Cliveden, the Luke of Westminster's residence, for the honeymoon.
Mr. Alfred Cooper, F.R.C.S., was married to Lady Agnes Flower, widow of the late Mr. Herbert Flower, and youngest daughter of the late Earl of Fife, on Tuesday, at St. George's Church, Hanover-square.
The marriage of Sir John Shelley, Bart., of Shobrooke Hall, Crediton, near Exeter, to Marion Emma, eldest daughter of Mr. Richard Benyon, of Englefield, Reading, formerly M.P. for Berkshire, was solemnised on Thursday week at St. Mark's Church, North Audley-street.
Mr. John Bickersteth, son of the Bishop of Ripon, will be married to Lady Margaret Ashburnham early next mouth.
Source: The Illustrated London News, July 8, 1882, p.42