Questions on Letters after the Name

When an American is bestowed an Honorary title, (i.e.
Honorary Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British
Empire), does this bestow any title on his wife?
AMcC
Thank you for your enquiry. No, an honorary title does not confer
any title upon the spouse.
I have to write to clients, and it is the husband
who has an MBE. Could you please advise the correct form of address
one should use on the letter and the envelope? ie. is it Mr A.B.
Black MBE and Mrs Black? JK
Joint forms of address are best avoided - for the simple reason
that the inclusion of post-nominal letters sometimes looks
cumbersome.
However, in some circumstances a joint form of address is
required. In the example you cite, your proposed form of address is
exactly right (Mr A. B. Black, MBE, and Mrs Black) (punctuation
optional). Your salutation would be 'Dear Mr and Mrs Black'. See Crown
Honours
I have bought a title that makes me a feudal lord of
Chelmswood. When I was in the army was awarded the UN-GSM-silver
jubilee medal and long service and good conduct medals. Can I put
any of these medals after my name and title? And how would I
be addressed? KD
It is probably wisest not to use your manorial title in any social
context, and only to wear your medals on Remembrance Sunday or at a
Regimental Reunion. Your medals are not Crown Honours, and
therefore cannot be added as letters after your name. See Crown
Honours
When a person is notified that they are being awarded an
MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours, when can they use MBE in their
title? Do they have to wait until after the investiture?
JS
The MBE may be used immediately upon announcement. There is no
need to wait until the investiture of the honour. See Crown
Honours
Having been honoured by Her Majesty by being made a
Member of the British Empire when should I and when should I not
use the MBE suffix? SL
It would be quite in order for you to have correspondence cards
printed with your name, followed by your post-nominal letters, at
the top of the card. It would also be helpful if on all
formal or business correspondence you were to type your name under
your signature with your post-nominal letters, so that your
correspondents will know how you should be correctly addressed.
It is a question of personal taste whether or not your post-nominal letters should appear on a list of names, etc, say at a golf club, but on balance I should recommend against using it with too much frequency. See Crown Honours
Our charity is doing some work with Sir Clive Woodward
and we are sure how to use his name on invitations - is it Sir
Clive Woodward or Sir Clive Woodward OBE? I thought the OBE was
overtaken by the knighthood? (The knighthood is newer than
the OBE.) RW
The correct way to address Sir Clive Woodward on an envelope for
example, or in any formal document, is Sir Clive Woodward, OBE.
The knighthood is quite separate from his OBE.
A social invitation from Sir Clive (ie 'Sir Clive Woodward requests the pleasure of your company etc etc') would not, however, include his post-nominal letters, as this would be considered too formal for a purely social event. See Crown Honours
The actress Dame Joan Plowright, the widow of Lord
Olivier, is the Patron of the Mander & Mitchenson Theatre
Collection. In putting her name on our notepaper, what is the
correct form? Joan Plowright, DBE, The Lady Olivier; Dame Joan
Plowright DBE, The Lady Olivier. Or something else?
RM
Thank you for your enquiry.
I should have thought that 'Dame Joan
Plowright, DBE' would have been quite adequate for your writing
paper, but if you know that Dame Joan is anxious to have her
married name as well, I think the only way would be to add it in a
bracket, ie 'Dame Joan Plowright, DBE (The Lady Olivier)'. The use
of the definite article is optional, although I note that it is
almost always used by Buckingham Palace in the Court Circular, so
perhaps it should be included - as above. See Crown
Honours
Could you please advise the correct form of address and
post-nominal order for a gentleman who is a JP and Lord-Lieutenant
and has just become a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian
Order. AR-T
There are no post-nominal letters that signify the rank of
Lord-Lieutenant. So, for example, if the gentleman in question is
Sir Henry Elwes, you should address your letter to Sir Henry Elwes,
KCVO.
A Justice of the Peace is not a Crown Honour, but you may certainly add these letters after KCVO, if you wish. If you are writing to a Lord-Lieutenant on a matter which concerns his county appointment you may add HM Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire as the second line of the address. See Crown Honours
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