Rosalie Glynn Grylls

Rosalie Grylls

(Mary) Rosalie Glynn Grylls (13 April 1905 2 November 1988), was a British biographer, lecturer and Liberal Party politician. In 1945 she became known as Lady Mander.

She was the daughter of Archibald Campbell Glynn Grylls[1] of Cornwall; the family had been established in the county for centuries.[2] She was educated at Queen's College, London and Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford where she graduated with a Master of Arts. She married, in November 1930, Geoffrey Mander MP for East Wolverhampton. She was his second wife. They had one son and one daughter.[3]

In 1929 she was employed as Secretary to the Liberal MP Edgar Granville. In July 1930 she was selected as Liberal prospective parliamentary candidate for the Reading Division of Berkshire for the General Election that was to occur in 1931. In November 1930 she married Liberal MP Geoffrey Mander at a ceremony at the House of Commons where Granville was Mander's best man. By the time the General Election came, a National Government had been formed and the Reading Liberals did not contest the constituency. Although she remained interested in politics, she did not attempt to stand again for public office and instead concentrated on her writing.

She was a noted biographer with a special interest in the writers and artists of the Romantic period and an early connoisseur of the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Her biographical subjects included Mary Shelley (1938), Claire Clairmont (1939), Edward John Trelawny (1950), William Godwin (1953), Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1965), Ivy Compton-Burnett (1971) and Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1980). She was influential in the overdue reassessment of the artists and writers of the Victorian period. She lectured frequently in the USA.

External links

References

  1. Burke's Peerage, 2003, volume 2, pg 2589
  2. Burke's Landed Gentry, 1952, Grylls of St Neot pedigree
  3. ‘MANDER, Lady (Rosalie); (R. Glynn Grylls)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 5 Dec 2013
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