Description

Book Synopsis

This book is one of the first to study the regional role of women in public and professional life, breaking new ground in early twentieth-century local and gender history.

Covering politics (Eleanor Acland and Clara Daymond), medicine and education (Dr Mabel Ramsay and Jessie Headridge), and a variety of voluntary organizations (Florence Cecil, Georgiana Buller, Jane Clinton and Sylvia Calmady-Hamlyn), it shows how women worked individually and in collaboration to create new opportunities for women and girls in a large, mainly rural, county far from London and the industrial heartlands of England. These biographical studies are based on original research and reveal the huge public contribution made by these eight women, who up to now have been largely hidden from history.

Devon Women in Public and Professional Life, 1900–1950 is a contribution to the history of women in Britain between the wars, a period that has received less attention than the Edwardian era and the two World Wars. It also fills a major gap in the history of Devon women, on which almost nothing has been published, and on Devon in the inter-war period, similarly neglected by historians. It will be of interest to academics and students in the fields of gender history and the history of modern Britain, as well as everyone interested in the history of twentieth-century Devon.



Trade Review

... an important advance in the recognition of the role of women in political and professional life

-- Helen Wilson, Devonshire Association News

Look no further for a book that demonstrates the importance of local and regional studies in understanding crucial historical themes and issues; or, indeed, one that is so successfully multi-authored.

-- Jane Howells, The Local Historian

The individual women come alive as we hear about their social backgrounds, personal feelings, and motivations as well as their public achievements...Devon Women is an important text that adds to our understanding of the many spheres in which women could make a difference as active citizens in the period after the vote was won.

-- June Hannam, Women's History Review

Scholarly, yet eminently accessible (both in terms of style and method of production, it being available on Open Access), this study is an excellent addition to what I hope will yet prove to be a growing corpus of local studies highlighting the individual and collaborative work undertaken by women who were intent on improving the lot of their communities, while engaging so many others in active citizenship.

-- Elizabeth Crawford, The Devon Historian

...this volume reminds us of the diversity of women's activism, then as now, and reveals the vibrancy of the contemporary women's movement. It is particularly commendable that it should do so through a local study of a largely rural county, far from the capital.

-- Anna Muggeridge, Twentieth Century British History

This is a well-written and impressively researched series of essays.

-- Mark Egan, Journal of Liberal History

The authors have ably achieved what they set out to do, and the reader's understanding of women's participation in public life is the richer for having read this book.

-- Janet Few, Journal of British Studies

Table of Contents

List of Figures

List of Acronyms

Acknowledgements

Introduction – Paul Auchterlonie

Chapter 1 Eleanor Margaret Acland (1878–1933) – Mitzi and Paul Auchterlonie

Chapter 2 Clara Henrietta Daymond (1873–1957) – Julia Neville

Chapter 3 Mabel Lieda Ramsay (1878–1954) – Ann Roberts

Chapter 4 Jessie Headridge (1871–1946) – Julia Neville

Chapter 5 Florence Gascoyne-Cecil (1863–1944) – Julia Neville and Helen Turnbull

Chapter 6 Georgiana Buller (1884–1953) – Julia Neville

Chapter 7 Jane Grey Clinton (1863–1953) – Julia Neville and Helen Turnbull

Chapter 8 Mary Sylvia Calmady-Hamlyn (1881–1962) – Julia Neville

Conclusion

Appendix: Voluntary Organizations in Devon Supported by the Subjects of these Biographies

Bibliography

Index

Devon Women in Public and Professional Life,

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    A Paperback / softback by Julia Neville, Mitzi Auchterlonie, Paul Auchterlonie

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      View other formats and editions of Devon Women in Public and Professional Life, by Julia Neville

      Publisher: University of Exeter Press
      Publication Date: 31/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9781905816774, 978-1905816774
      ISBN10: 1905816774

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book is one of the first to study the regional role of women in public and professional life, breaking new ground in early twentieth-century local and gender history.

      Covering politics (Eleanor Acland and Clara Daymond), medicine and education (Dr Mabel Ramsay and Jessie Headridge), and a variety of voluntary organizations (Florence Cecil, Georgiana Buller, Jane Clinton and Sylvia Calmady-Hamlyn), it shows how women worked individually and in collaboration to create new opportunities for women and girls in a large, mainly rural, county far from London and the industrial heartlands of England. These biographical studies are based on original research and reveal the huge public contribution made by these eight women, who up to now have been largely hidden from history.

      Devon Women in Public and Professional Life, 1900–1950 is a contribution to the history of women in Britain between the wars, a period that has received less attention than the Edwardian era and the two World Wars. It also fills a major gap in the history of Devon women, on which almost nothing has been published, and on Devon in the inter-war period, similarly neglected by historians. It will be of interest to academics and students in the fields of gender history and the history of modern Britain, as well as everyone interested in the history of twentieth-century Devon.



      Trade Review

      ... an important advance in the recognition of the role of women in political and professional life

      -- Helen Wilson, Devonshire Association News

      Look no further for a book that demonstrates the importance of local and regional studies in understanding crucial historical themes and issues; or, indeed, one that is so successfully multi-authored.

      -- Jane Howells, The Local Historian

      The individual women come alive as we hear about their social backgrounds, personal feelings, and motivations as well as their public achievements...Devon Women is an important text that adds to our understanding of the many spheres in which women could make a difference as active citizens in the period after the vote was won.

      -- June Hannam, Women's History Review

      Scholarly, yet eminently accessible (both in terms of style and method of production, it being available on Open Access), this study is an excellent addition to what I hope will yet prove to be a growing corpus of local studies highlighting the individual and collaborative work undertaken by women who were intent on improving the lot of their communities, while engaging so many others in active citizenship.

      -- Elizabeth Crawford, The Devon Historian

      ...this volume reminds us of the diversity of women's activism, then as now, and reveals the vibrancy of the contemporary women's movement. It is particularly commendable that it should do so through a local study of a largely rural county, far from the capital.

      -- Anna Muggeridge, Twentieth Century British History

      This is a well-written and impressively researched series of essays.

      -- Mark Egan, Journal of Liberal History

      The authors have ably achieved what they set out to do, and the reader's understanding of women's participation in public life is the richer for having read this book.

      -- Janet Few, Journal of British Studies

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures

      List of Acronyms

      Acknowledgements

      Introduction – Paul Auchterlonie

      Chapter 1 Eleanor Margaret Acland (1878–1933) – Mitzi and Paul Auchterlonie

      Chapter 2 Clara Henrietta Daymond (1873–1957) – Julia Neville

      Chapter 3 Mabel Lieda Ramsay (1878–1954) – Ann Roberts

      Chapter 4 Jessie Headridge (1871–1946) – Julia Neville

      Chapter 5 Florence Gascoyne-Cecil (1863–1944) – Julia Neville and Helen Turnbull

      Chapter 6 Georgiana Buller (1884–1953) – Julia Neville

      Chapter 7 Jane Grey Clinton (1863–1953) – Julia Neville and Helen Turnbull

      Chapter 8 Mary Sylvia Calmady-Hamlyn (1881–1962) – Julia Neville

      Conclusion

      Appendix: Voluntary Organizations in Devon Supported by the Subjects of these Biographies

      Bibliography

      Index

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