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Scarlett and Alfie, Jacqueline Gold Children Were Twins Before Son Alfie’s Death

Jacqueline Gold Daughter is 13 years of age. If her twin brother had survived, he would have been 13 too. Learn what we know about this issue.

Jacqueline Summers Gold is the Chief Executive Officer of Gold Group International, Ann Summers, and Knickerbox.

Gold is thought to be the 16th richest lady in the United Kingdom. According to The Sunday Times Rich List for 2019, gold is valued at £470 million.

What Is Jacqueline Gold Daughter Scarlett Age?

 Jacqueline Gold Daughter Scarlett is guessed to be of 13 years of age.

Jacqueline had always wanted children, but the breakdown of her first marriage had conspired to make her one of the growing numbers of women in their late 30s and early 40s struggling with infertility.

After meeting Dan in early 2002, she thought that the time had come for her to start a family.

Jacqueline and Dan were overjoyed when they realized she was pregnant. The fact that Jacqueline was expecting twins added to their happiness.

However, only one of the twins is alive as, sadly, the other twin suffers from a scary medical condition.

Learn About Son Alfie Death

Jacqueline Gold’s son Alfie was born with a severe brain disability. 

 The 58-year-old multimillionaire entrepreneur spoke out about the death of her son, Alfie, who died at the age of eight months.

‘Alfie did survive the delivery,’ an emotional Jacqueline revealed on BBC Radio 4’s Today program. ‘When he was born, he was sobbing, but not in the way that infants cry; he was crying because he was in pain.’

No mother should have to endure hearing her kid cry in anguish.’ Jacqueline, who described herself as ‘ecstatic’ when she found out she was having a boy and a girl, was told her son had a severe condition that meant he would not survive delivery.

He lived for eight months, but he was never fit enough to leave the hospital.

How Many Children Does Jacqueline Gold Have?

Jacqueline Gold only has one child now. She was a bother of twins, but sadly one of them died.

To say Jacqueline’s road to parenthood has been challenging is an understatement.

She began bleeding at 24 weeks and was taken to University College London Hospital (UCLH), where she would remain for the remainder of her pregnancy.

During a regular appointment with her gynecologist six weeks into her stay, she realized that the prognosis for her ‘poorly’ baby was not as easy as she had been led to think.