Difference between revisions of "Nellie Benson"

From LGBT Archive
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:Lambeth Women Speak.jpg|thumb|Cover of her book]]'''Nellie Benson''' ('''Mary Eleanor Benson''', 1863-1890) was the daughter of [[Edward White Benson]], Archbishop of Canterbury and his wife [[Mary Benson]].
 
[[File:Lambeth Women Speak.jpg|thumb|Cover of her book]]'''Nellie Benson''' ('''Mary Eleanor Benson''', 1863-1890) was the daughter of [[Edward White Benson]], Archbishop of Canterbury and his wife [[Mary Benson]].
  
She attended [[Lady Margaret Hall, [[Oxford]].
+
She attended [[Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford]].
 
:"Although also an avid sportswoman, excelling in tennis and a member of a lady's cricket team, she was not one of the notorious "new women," who challenged Victorian mores."<ref name=anderson>https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-823004261/lambeth-women-speak-urban-poverty-and-religion-in  Nancy Fix Anderson, "Lambeth Women Speak: Urban Poverty and Religion in Nellie Benson's London" in ''Anglican and Episcopal History,'', June 2003</ref>
 
:"Although also an avid sportswoman, excelling in tennis and a member of a lady's cricket team, she was not one of the notorious "new women," who challenged Victorian mores."<ref name=anderson>https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-823004261/lambeth-women-speak-urban-poverty-and-religion-in  Nancy Fix Anderson, "Lambeth Women Speak: Urban Poverty and Religion in Nellie Benson's London" in ''Anglican and Episcopal History,'', June 2003</ref>
  

Revision as of 20:56, 13 March 2016

Cover of her book
Nellie Benson (Mary Eleanor Benson, 1863-1890) was the daughter of Edward White Benson, Archbishop of Canterbury and his wife Mary Benson.

She attended Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.

"Although also an avid sportswoman, excelling in tennis and a member of a lady's cricket team, she was not one of the notorious "new women," who challenged Victorian mores."[1]

She observed the lives of working-class women in Lambeth, and her observations were published posthumously as Streets and Lanes of the City[2]

Towards the end of her short life, Nellie had an affair with her mother's former lover, the composer Ethel Smyth.[3]

References

  1. https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-823004261/lambeth-women-speak-urban-poverty-and-religion-in Nancy Fix Anderson, "Lambeth Women Speak: Urban Poverty and Religion in Nellie Benson's London" in Anglican and Episcopal History,, June 2003
  2. Republished as Lambeth Women Speak: Urban Poverty and Religion in Nellie Benson's London
  3. Martha Vicinus, Intimate Friends: Women Who Loved Women, 1778-1928 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004) page 134.