Multiple accounts describe the Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson, spending her final years away from public life after her husband, King Edward VIII, abdicated. The reports characterize her later existence as difficult and largely devoid of comfort, emphasizing that she had few, if any, periods of happiness during her time in exile. They also assert that her circumstances were compounded by a lack of support from people close to her, framing her death as the end of a prolonged period of relative isolation. Although the sources provided focus mainly on her final period rather than specifying dates, places, or the detailed circumstances of her passing, they consistently present a similar overall picture: Simpson lives out her widowhood in reduced circumstances following the end of Edward VIII’s reign, and her later life is depicted as marked by hardship and personal betrayal. The reports do not present countervailing interpretations in the material provided.