Annie MacDonald
Annie MacDonald née Mitchell (1832–1897), was a British courtier. She was a Dresser (lady's maid) to Queen Victoria of Great Britain between 1862 and 1897.[1]
She was born near Balmoral Castle in Scotland. She married the butler John McDonald (d. 1865) in 1863. Initially a washer woman of prince Albert, she was employed by the queen in 1862. She was the Principle Dresser and as such overranked and supervised the Second and Third Dresser and the Wardrobe Maids, all part of the Department of the Mistress of the Robes.
She was responsible for the organization of the queen's chamber staff, handling the contacts with tradespeople and artists, making orders and paying them and answering beggar letters. She was a personal friend of queen Victoria and replaced Marianne Skerrett as the queen's confidante when Skerrett retired in 1862. As such she had an important position in the royal household, as the queen was generally closer to her chamber staff than to her ladies-in-waitings, to whom she normally had a less personal attitude. When Victoria died, she was noted to say, that she hoped to be reunited with John Brown and Annie MacDonald.
She is known and often mentioned in Victoria's letter, Queen Victoria's journals and Queen Victoria's Highland Journals.