Lady Edwina Grosvenor

Birthday November 4, 1981

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Eaton Hall, Cheshire, England

Age 42 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#3208 Most Popular

1981

Lady Edwina Louise Snow (née Grosvenor; born 4 November 1981) is an English criminologist, philanthropist and prison reformer.

She is a founder and a trustee of the charity The Clink, and founder of the charity One Small Thing.

She is the sister of Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster.

Lady Edwina Louise Grosvenor was born at Eaton Hall, Cheshire, on 4 November 1981.

She is the daughter of the 6th Duke of Westminster and Natalia Ayesha Phillips.

Through her mother, she is descended from the Romanov imperial family of Russia and the Russian writer Alexander Pushkin, as well as from the latter's great-grandfather – African tribal chief turned Russian nobleman Abram Petrovich Hannibal.

Grosvenor's godmother was Diana, Princess of Wales.

She went to a co-educational school in Shropshire.

At the age of 12, she was taken to a Liverpool rehabilitation centre, where she was introduced to heroin addicts and became interested in helping society's unseen people.

At age 15, she volunteered at a homeless shelter run by the charity Save the Family.

She spent her gap year working in a prison in Kathmandu before studying criminology at Northumbria University.

She studied criminal behaviour at Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia.

In August 2021, Grosvenor graduated from Solent University with a master’s degree in criminology and crime scene management, achieving a distinction.

During her time in Nepal, Grosvenor worked for The Esther Benjamins Trust, a charity which works to have innocent children removed from prison.

She also worked at the Central Jail in Kathmandu.

Lady Edwina commissioned research by the Corston Coalition into the needs of women offenders, spent a year as a support worker at Cheshire's HM Prison Styal, then worked in HM Prison Garth in Lancashire, helping with the restorative justice program.

2007

She sits on the Advisory Board for Female Offenders under the Secretary of State for Justice and, from 2007 to 2010, was an advisor to James Jones, then Bishop of Liverpool and Bishop to Her Majesty's Prisons.

2009

In 2009, Grosvenor became the founding investor of The Clink, a British charity that identifies the training and support needed for prisoners to find jobs following release.

The Clink restaurant, a fine-dining training restaurant, opened in HM Prison High Down in 2009.

2011

She became a trustee of the charity in 2011, before stepping down as a trustee in 2018.

She now serves as one of The Clink ambassadors.

2014

In 2014, Grosvenor presented the BBC Radio 4 Charity Appeal for the Prisoners' Advice Service.

2015

In 2015, she visited Ellesmere College and delivered a speech about prison reform and rehabilitation.

She founded One Small Thing, a charity that seeks to understand the trauma within the prison system and raise awareness of how compassion and respect can prevent women from re-offending.

One Small Thing trains prison staff about trauma, helps them change their behaviour to protect women inmates, and develops trauma services within prisons.

Edwina founded the Becoming Trauma Informed program across the Female Prison Estate in England and Wales.

2017

In September 2017, One Small Thing collaborated with the Rumi Foundation to research women's prisons around the country.

2018

In 2018, One Small Thing was awarded the Howard League for Penal Reform's Criminal Justice Champion Award.

Grosvenor is a trustee of the Centre for Mental Health, and has established trauma-informed mental health workshops in women's prisons.

She is an ambassador of the No Way Trust, which educates students about the realities of prison life, and crime and consequences, and hosts the podcast "Justice", in which she discusses the environment of British prisons.

In July 2018, Grosvenor was awarded an honorary fellowship of Liverpool John Moores University for her contribution to public life.

2020

Grosvenor became a member of the advisory board to the Centre for Criminology in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford, and, in 2020, donated £90,000 to the University of Oxford to fund the Death Penalty Research Unit.

She is a member of the Vice Chancellor's Circle of Benefactors of the University of Oxford's Faculty of Law.

Lady Edwina works on a project called Hope Street, a healing residential community alternative for women who were in custody prior to sentencing or already served their sentences alongside their children.

Hope Street was opened by Catherine, Princess of Wales in Southampton on 27 June 2023.

The programme was monitored by the University of Southampton, The Prison Reform Trust and EP:IC.

She also works with Pathways, a London-based community regeneration program that helps to create sustainable businesses run by former offenders.

In January 2022, Grosvenor became a founding member of the Global Philanthropic Advisory Board.

She is a patron of Paladin, a non-profit advocacy service for victims of stalking.

In March 2022, she became the High Sheriff of Hampshire.