San Francisco Chronicle

Society photograph­er, Margaret’s ex-husband

- By Gregory Katz Gregory Katz is an Associated Press writer.

LONDON — Lord Snowdon, the society photograph­er and filmmaker who married Britain’s Princess Margaret and continued to mix in royal circles even after their divorce, has died. He was 86.

Buckingham Palace said that Queen Elizabeth II, Margaret’s sister, had been told that he died.

“The Earl of Snowdon died peacefully at home on 13th January 2017,” said Camera Press, the photo agency with which he worked.

One of the country’s most famous photograph­ers, Lord Snowdon was one of the few topechelon royals to hold down an outside job after he married the queen’s sister in 1960, and his profession­al reputation grew steadily. Margaret died in 2002. Lord Snowdon was admired for his discretion, never speaking with the media about the breakup of the marriage in 1978, and rejecting offers to write a book about it.

Born Antony Armstrong-Jones on March 7, 1930, he was a slightly bohemian member of London’s smart set and an establishe­d society photograph­er when he and the queen’s sister surprised the country with their engagement in February 1960.

They had met at a London party and managed to keep their courtship a secret in the months that followed, despite intense interest in Margaret’s romantic life.

Unconventi­onal, artistic and not nearly as wealthy as Margaret’s other suitors, he lived in a studio in west London and did his own cooking. He was certainly not seen by the public and press as a royal prospect.

The “Jones Boy” married the high-spirited Margaret at Westminste­r Abbey on May 6, 1960, in the first royal wedding to be televised.

By the early 1970s, Lord Snowdon’s marriage to Margaret was beset by rumors of infidelity. They separated in 1976 and quietly divorced in 1978.

 ?? AFP / Getty Images 1961 ?? Princess Margaret (left) holds son Linley alongside Lord Snowdon and the Queen Mother in 1961.
AFP / Getty Images 1961 Princess Margaret (left) holds son Linley alongside Lord Snowdon and the Queen Mother in 1961.

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