English war hospital worker, daughter of the 3rd Baron Abinger; born on the 9th of August 1867. She married Maj. Haverfield, R.A., in 1887, and en secondes noces Gen. Balguy in 1899. A keen sportswoman, she collected abandoned troop horses on the veldt during the Boer War and nursed them back to good condition. She was among the first London women-suffragists to be sentenced to imprisonment and organized a branch of the Women’s Social and Political Union. She was one of the original members of the Women’s Emergency Corps in August 1914, founded and organized the Women’s Volunteer Reserve, and was commandant-in-chief of the Women’s Reserve Ambulance (Green Cross Corps). In April 1915 she went to Serbia as administrator of the Scottish Women’s hospital unit at Valjevo, and remained with Dr. Elsie Inglis working for the Serbs as prisoners of the enemy from November to February 1916. In August 1916 she went to Russia in charge of the transport column of Dr. Inglis’s unit. On her return in November 1917 she organized a comforts fund for the Serbian army, which became a fund for disabled men and their dependents after the Armistice. In August 1910 she went to Serbia as honorary Secretary of this fund and as commissioner for the Serbian Red Cross Society in Great Britain. At her instigation her friends at home raised another fund for Serbian children, with which she established an orphanage at Baiyna Bachta, on the borders of Bosnia, and there she succumbed to pneumonia brought on by fatigue and exposure on the 21st of March 1920. She received the Order of St. Sava, classes IV. and V., St. George’s medal for bravery under fire, and a Russian medal, class II., for meritorious service. The Order of the White Eagle was posthumously bestowed.