- Georgina Battiscombe
Georgina Battiscombe (
November 21 ,1905 –February 26 ,2006 ) was a British biographer, specialising mainly in lives from the Victorian age.She was born Esther Georgina Harwood, the elder daughter of
George Harwood , a former clergyman, Liberal MP for his home town of Bolton, Lancashire, master cotton spinner, and an author and barrister. Her family was steeped in politics: her maternal grandfather,Sir Alfred Hopkinson , KC (the first Vice-Chancellor of Manchester University), three uncles and her stepfather,John Murray (Principal of the University College of the South West of England, Exeter), all became Members of Parliament.She was educated at St Michael's School, Oxford, and at Lady Margaret Hall, and once considered a political career herself. In 1932 she married
Christopher Battiscombe (d.1964), a lieutenant-colonel in the Grenadier Guards. For a time they lived in Zanzibar, where Colonel Battiscombe was Secretary to the Sultan. They then lived at Durham before moving to the Henry III Tower atWindsor Castle as Lt-Col Battiscombe became honorary secretary of the Society of the Friends of St George's from 1958 to 1960.Her best known books were biographies of the Victorian romantic novelist
Charlotte M. Yonge (1943);Mrs Gladstone (1956);John Keble (1963 - awarded theJames Tait Black Memorial Prize ); andQueen Alexandra (1969). She was drawn to the subject of Queen Alexandra, wife ofEdward VII , because she suffered from the same form of deafness,otosclerosis , which had afflicted the queen, and was very deaf from the age of about 20 until she was 50. Two operations and a modern hearing aid entirely overcame this disability but, as she said, it gave her "some understanding of Alexandra's predicament". As a royal biographer, she was appalled by the way in which members of the Royal Family were frequently treated, decrying the sensational and the scandalous, rightly considering many royal biographies ill-informed, and noting that "so often the unfortunate royalties do not even receive common politeness from those who write about them". Her other titles includedTwo on Safari (1946);English Picnics (1949);Christina Rossetti (1965),Shaftesbury (1974); (1978);The Spencers of Althorp (1984); andWinter Song , a book of poems (1992). She became a Fellow of theRoyal Society of Literature in 1964. She died in 2006, aged 100.
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