THE barefoot ARISTOCRAT
The Australian Women's Weekly|March 2023
The King is her godfather, her grandmother was the last vicereine of India, and her father was arguably England's greatest 20th century designer. But India Hicks is very much her own woman.
SUSAN CHENERY
THE barefoot ARISTOCRAT

It all looks so perfect. So idyllic. As if Instagram was invented for India Hicks, aristocratic daughter of one of England’s grandest families. Her father, the famed British designer David Hicks, compiled a list of possible husbands for her, all dukes with vast estates. Instead, she had five children out of wedlock, a barefoot runaway to tiny Harbour Island in the Bahamas, a place with no doctor, no dentist, uncertain electricity and a three-month hurricane season.

“So when a kid falls out of a tree and breaks an arm, you’re up shit creek,” she tells The Weekly with a laugh. “Nothing is ever as perfect as it looks. But I’m a big believer in the adventure of life.”

It is here, with her beautiful children, on these pink-sand beaches in her whitewashed plantation house among the palm trees, that India became a style icon, an exemplar of haute bohemian tropical chic. Bringing up her children, chasing snakes up trees – it’s a long way from the strict, starched nannies of her own childhood.

“My children have grown up unbelievably open-minded because we live in a community where we are the minority,” she says. “We are strangers in a strange land. They never forget that.”

She has also built a perfectly symmetrical, white stucco second home in Oxfordshire, which was featured in Architectural Digest.

India loves nothing more “than walking in biblical conditions of rain, sleet and snow,” her husband, David Flint Wood, comments in her book, A Slice of England. They built the house in England to be closer to her mother, Lady Pamela Hicks, “but not too close,” David adds.

This story is from the March 2023 edition of The Australian Women's Weekly.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the March 2023 edition of The Australian Women's Weekly.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM THE AUSTRALIAN WOMEN'S WEEKLYView All
Where to go in 2024
The Australian Women's Weekly

Where to go in 2024

Who doesn't love fantasising about their next trip? We've gone for lesser-known locations, and whether you're seeking bright lights, striking natural scenery, serenity or excitement, here's where you're sure to find it.

time-read
5 mins  |
January 2024
Money matters with Effie
The Australian Women's Weekly

Money matters with Effie

Didn’t reach your financial goals in 2023? While a new year won’t wipe away pressures like rising costs, there are  a few things you can do now to refresh your money mojo in 2024.

time-read
4 mins  |
January 2024
Bright stars in a rugged land
The Australian Women's Weekly

Bright stars in a rugged land

The hot, dusty opal fields around Lightning Ridge in outback NSW have traditionally been a man's world. Now The Weekly meets the women who have been struck by opal fever.

time-read
6 mins  |
January 2024
The gift of life
The Australian Women's Weekly

The gift of life

Maureen Elliott had just months to live when she went on St Vincent's Hospital's transplant list. Thirty years on she's one of the longest living heart-lung transplant recipients in the world.

time-read
9 mins  |
January 2024
An uncaged heart
The Australian Women's Weekly

An uncaged heart

After more than two years in Iranian jails, Kylie Moore-Gilbert has forged a new life that's brimming with love, and a determination to help others who have been wrongfully imprisoned.

time-read
10 mins  |
January 2024
The woman behind The King
The Australian Women's Weekly

The woman behind The King

As Sofia Coppola's biopic Priscilla readies to hit screens, we look back at the early life and great love of Priscilla Beaulieu Presley.

time-read
5 mins  |
January 2024
Say hello to the Cockatoo cake
The Australian Women's Weekly

Say hello to the Cockatoo cake

When we put a call-out to our readers for their best children's cakes we were inundated with recipes, and this clever cockatoo was ahead of the flock.

time-read
4 mins  |
January 2024
The French revolution
The Australian Women's Weekly

The French revolution

Dawn French quit her sketch show because she felt so ugly. Now the \"roly-poly comedian\" wants us all to stop fretting about our faults. She talks body image, surviving the 1980s and owning her mistakes.

time-read
10+ mins  |
January 2024
Trump's women
The Australian Women's Weekly

Trump's women

Will it be the jailhouse or the White House for Donald Trump this year? The women in his life could make all the difference.

time-read
9 mins  |
January 2024
Can you buy a good night's sleep?
The Australian Women's Weekly

Can you buy a good night's sleep?

Forty per cent of Australians have trouble sleeping, and the market has responded with a mind-boggling array of sleep aids. But do any of them actually work? The Weekly goes in search of slumber.

time-read
7 mins  |
January 2024