Winifred Fortescue

Winifred Fortescue (7 February 1888 9 April 1951) was a British writer and actress. The wife of Sir John Fortescue, Librarian and Archivist at Windsor Castle and reputed British Army historian, she became formally styled Winifred, Lady Fortescue when he was knighted in 1926.

Biography

Lady Fortescue (born Winifred Beech in 1888) was a daughter of the Revd Howard Beech, Rector of Great Bealings (from 1886). She was mainly educated at home having "outgrown her strength" but at age 16 her doctor informed her mother that she was suffering from "intellectual starvation" and she applied for, and was successful in getting into, Old Cedar House School, Slough.[1] This later transferred to London and became Wentworth Hall, Mill Hill. She then attended F.R. Benson's Dramatic School to train for the stage. She then went on the stage, performing in Sir Herbert Tree's company, and later starring in Jerome K. Jerome's "The Passing of the Third Floor Back".

In 1914 she married John Fortescue, despite being 28 years younger than him. She gave up her stage career and took up an interior decorating and dress designing business until illness forced her to give up. She then began writing for Punch, the Daily Chronicle and The Evening News, and then started a Womans' Page for the Morning Post.

In the 1930s Sir John and Lady Fortescue moved to Provence in France beginning her book writing career with "Perfume from Provence". She wrote a number of other books whilst there. Her husband died within 2 years of them moving to France but she stayed on until forced to move out by the German invasion during World War II. She returned at the end of the war and died in Opio, Provence.

Bibliography

External links

References

  1. Fortescue, Lady (1939). There's Rosemary , there's Rue. Black Swan. ISBN 0-552-99558-4.