Inquest hears Lady Masham died from sepsis

Lady Masham died from sepsis after being admitted to hospital, an inquest has heard.

At the hearing, held this morning at the Coroner’s Court in Northallerton, assistant coroner Richard Watson said Susan Cunliffe-Lister had been admitted to the Friarage Hospital in Northallerton on February 2, feeling unwell and breathless.

She died there on March 12, aged 87.

The initial cause of death given at today’s inquest was sepsis of unknown origin, and myelodysplasia, a rare type of blood cancer where the bone marrow does not produce enough healthy blood cells.

The court heard her disability, caused by a riding accident in 1958, was also believed to have contributed to her death. The inquest was adjourned to a later date.

Born Susan Lilian Primrose Sinclair in April 1935, she became paraplegic in the accident, using a wheelchair for the rest of her life.

Until her death, Lady Masham was a prominent disability rights campaigner and founded the Spinal Injuries Association in 1974.


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She represented Great Britain in the inaugural Paralympics in 1960, as well as in 1964 and 1968, winning two gold medals, six silver, and two bronze, in swimming and table tennis.

She became Lady Masham on her marriage to David Cunliffe-Lister in 1959, and the couple then became the Earl and Countess of Swinton in 1972 after the death of his father.

She was made a life peer in 1970 as Baroness Masham of Ilton and was the longest-serving woman ever to sit in the House of Lords. She continued to focus on disability rights throughout her life and was patron of Harrogate-based charity Disability Action Yorkshire.

Baroness Masham dies aged 87

Baroness Masham, who was a the longest-serving female member of the House of Lords ever, Paralympian medallist and disability rights campaigner, has died aged 87.

She died peacefully in hospital in Northallerton on Sunday.

Born Susan Sinclair on April 14, 1935, she became a wheelchair user after injuring her spinal cord in a riding accident in 1958.

In 1959 she married David Cunliffe-Lister, who became Earl of Swinton in 1972, to become Lady Masham.

She served as a cross-bench peer for 53 years after becoming Baroness Masham of Ilton in 1970.

Baroness Masham was the aunt of Mark Cunliffe-Lister, the 4th Earl of Swinton and husband of Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, who was elected as a Liberal Democrat to the Masham and Fountains division on North Yorkshire County Council this year in a by-election caused by the death of Conservative councillor Margaret Atkinson.

Baroness Masham won medals in swimming and table tennis at the 1960, 1964 and 1968 Paralympic games.


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In 1974 she founded the Spinal Injuries Association and remained its president until her death.

The association, which announced her death today, said it was “devastated to have lost our greatest champion”, adding she was “the reason we have been able to champion, fight, serve and support thousands of spinal cord injured people”.

Baroness Masham was the subject of an episode of This Is Your Life in 1976.

She belonged to various parliamentary committees and last spoke in the House of Lords on February 2 this year.

Guy Tweedy, a Harrogate thalidomide campaigner and trustee of Disability Action Yorkshire who met Baroness Masham many times, said:

“Baroness Masham was a formidable woman. She was a trailblazer for disability rights, along with Lord Morris of Manchester and Baron Ashley of Stoke.

“Without the work of those three we wouldn’t be where we are today with disability rights.”