Difference between revisions of "Carole Bamford"

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[[Carole Bamford]] (Lady Bamford) is the head of retailer [[Daylesford Organic]]  and the wife of [[JCB]] chairman Sir [[Antony Bamford]].<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
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[[Carole Bamford]] (Lady Bamford) is the head of retailer [[Daylesford Organic]]  and the wife of [[JCB]] chairman Sir [[Anthony Bamford]].<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
''W Magaine'' reports:
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''W Magazine'' reports:
 
::Bamford has distinctly middle-class origins. She was born in Nottingham to the owner of a house-building firm and, what’s more, had an early stint as a flight attendant. Mention Bamford’s name in snobby circles and you might well get a knowing look and then a whispered “Doors to manual.” This snide sobriquet is hardly uncommon; it has also been lobbed on the mother of Kate Middleton. In Bamford’s case, the expression seems directed with more zing, probably because she has become so rich and so grand—rather unforgivable offenses in ossified upper-class England.<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
 
::Bamford has distinctly middle-class origins. She was born in Nottingham to the owner of a house-building firm and, what’s more, had an early stint as a flight attendant. Mention Bamford’s name in snobby circles and you might well get a knowing look and then a whispered “Doors to manual.” This snide sobriquet is hardly uncommon; it has also been lobbed on the mother of Kate Middleton. In Bamford’s case, the expression seems directed with more zing, probably because she has become so rich and so grand—rather unforgivable offenses in ossified upper-class England.<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
  
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Bamford founded Daylesford Organic in the early 2000s to market produce from the Daylesford estate. She has also established women's and men's fashion lines, Bamford and Bamford & Sons.<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
 
Bamford founded Daylesford Organic in the early 2000s to market produce from the Daylesford estate. She has also established women's and men's fashion lines, Bamford and Bamford & Sons.<ref name="LadyBountiful">James Reginato, [http://www.wmagazine.com/society/2007/12/lady_bamford Lady Bountiful], ''W Magazine'', December 2007.</ref>
  
<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/agriculture/6789670/Daylesford-Organic-farms-fined-90000-over-workers-death.html Daylesford Organic farms fined £90,000 over worker's death], ''Telegraph'', 12 December 2009.</ref>
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In December 2009, Daylesford Organic was ordered to pay more than £90,000 after gardener Tony Cripps fell to his death from a JCB digger while picking elderflowers.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/agriculture/6789670/Daylesford-Organic-farms-fined-90000-over-workers-death.html Daylesford Organic farms fined £90,000 over worker's death], ''Telegraph'', 12 December 2009.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 00:36, 28 March 2012

Carole Bamford (Lady Bamford) is the head of retailer Daylesford Organic and the wife of JCB chairman Sir Anthony Bamford.[1]

Background

W Magazine reports:

Bamford has distinctly middle-class origins. She was born in Nottingham to the owner of a house-building firm and, what’s more, had an early stint as a flight attendant. Mention Bamford’s name in snobby circles and you might well get a knowing look and then a whispered “Doors to manual.” This snide sobriquet is hardly uncommon; it has also been lobbed on the mother of Kate Middleton. In Bamford’s case, the expression seems directed with more zing, probably because she has become so rich and so grand—rather unforgivable offenses in ossified upper-class England.[1]

Daylesford Organic

Bamford founded Daylesford Organic in the early 2000s to market produce from the Daylesford estate. She has also established women's and men's fashion lines, Bamford and Bamford & Sons.[1]

In December 2009, Daylesford Organic was ordered to pay more than £90,000 after gardener Tony Cripps fell to his death from a JCB digger while picking elderflowers.[2]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 James Reginato, Lady Bountiful, W Magazine, December 2007.
  2. Daylesford Organic farms fined £90,000 over worker's death, Telegraph, 12 December 2009.