Rosalind had two younger siblings: Henry Cubitt, who succeeded his father as the 4th Baron Ashcombe, and Jeremy Cubitt, who died in 1958 at the age of 30.[4][5]
Her family was the aristocratic and wealthy Cubitt family,[6] which founded the Cubitt construction company.[7] She was a goddaughter of Dame Margaret Greville and inherited some of her fortune.[8]
Rosalind was named by the press as the 1939 'Debutante of the Year'.[9] She had her debutante ball on 6 July 1939 at the Holland House in Kensington, London. It was attended by more than a thousand guests including famous playwright and composer Noël Coward and royals King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. The ball was described as the last grand and great ball held at the house before it was destroyed during the Second World War.[10][11]
Rosalind worked for an adoption agency before marriage.[16] She volunteered at the Chailey Heritage Foundation, which helps young children with disabilities, in the 1960s and 1970s located at North Chailey, East Sussex. She worked there as a volunteer for 17 years. Her daughter Camilla opened a new facility there in 2013.[17]
Death
She died at Lewes, East Sussex on 14 July 1994 aged 72, having long suffered from osteoporosis.[18] Her mother Sonia also died from the same disease in 1986.[18] She was survived by her husband, her three children and five grandchildren. Her youngest granddaughter, Ayesha, was born a year after her death.
Following her mother's death, Camilla became a member of the National Osteoporosis Society, which later became Royal Osteoporosis Society (a charity dedicated to improving the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of osteoporosis) in 1994 to help raise awareness of the disease, became Patron of the charity in 1997 and was appointed its president in 2001.[19]
^Emma Soames (20 November 2006). "Camilla's dearest cause". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 25 April 2014.