Connie Mark

Connie Mark
Born Constance Winifred McDonald
(1923-12-21)21 December 1923
Rollington Town, Kingston, Jamaica
Died 3 June 2007(2007-06-03) (aged 83)
London, England
Nationality British
Other names Winnie McDonald, Constance Goodridge, Connie Goodridge-Mark
Occupation ATS medical secretary, West Indian activist
Years active 1943–2007
Known for Jamaican Auxiliary Territorial Service and establishing a memorial for Mary Seacole

Connie Mark, BEM, MBE (21 December 1923 – 3 June 2007) was a Jamaican medical secretary who served in the Auxiliary Territorial Service in the period following World War II. After moving to London in the early 1950s, she became an activist for West Indians in London, after being denied her British Empire Medal. She worked to gain recognition for black service personnel who were overlooked for their services and established the Mary Seacole Memorial Association to bring recognition to the accomplishments of the noted nurse.

Early life

Constance Winifred McDonald was born on 21 December 1923 in Rollington Town, Kingston, Jamaica, to Mary Rosannah (née Fyfe) and Ernest Lynas McDonald.[1][2] In her youth, she was known as "Winnie" but in later life was known as "Connie".[3] Of mixed ethnicity, McDonald's background included a paternal grandmother from Jamaica and grandfather from Scotland, as well as a maternal grandmother of Lebanese heritage and a paternal grandfather who had been an indentured labourer from Calcutta. In spite of her varied genetics, the family considered themselves British.[4] She was raised in Kingston and attended Wolmer's Girls' School.[1]

Career

In 1943, McDonald was recruited to join the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) because of her bookkeeping expertise.[1][4] She worked in the British Military Hospital of Kingston, as a medical secretary, typing reports of battle injuries.[4] Upon completing six months of service, McDonald was promoted to lance corporal[5] and applied for her additional pay as provided for in the British Army regulations. The War Office turned down her request, stating that the ATS officers were not entitled to the increase.[4] Six months later, McDonald was promoted to full corporal[5] and her pay increase was still denied. McDonald viewed the policy as racist, feeling that as she was in a British regiment of the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC).[4] She said, "We were British! England was our mother country. We were brought up to respect the royal family." She fought for, but never received what she considered the queen owned her as back pay.[1][4]

When the war ended, McDonald's commanding officer put in for her to receive the British Empire Medal, but her recognition was denied. McDonald believed the denial was due to her having refused to clean British officer personnel's private quarters.[4] In 1949, when the ATS was merged into the Women's Royal Army Corps she signed up for further service.[5][6] In 1952, she married Jamaican fast bowler Stanley Goodridge, and they subsequently had a daughter, Amru Elizabeth. Soon thereafter, Stanley won a contract to play cricket in Durham and he moved to England. After completing a decade of service with the RAMC, McDonald-Goodridge joined her husband with their daughter in England, where she gave birth to their second child, Stanley, in 1957.[1]

Once they were settled in Britain, McDonald-Goodridge returned to her work as a medical secretary. She also became involved in charitable works, community service and educational projects.[7][8] The Goodridges divorced and she remarried Michael Mark.[1] She joined the West Indian ex-Servicemen’s Association and pressed for them to add women to the title of the organization, continuing her fight for the recognition of women's contributions to the war effort.[4]

In 1980, Mark founded an organization called the Friends of Mary Seacole, which was later called the Mary Seacole Memorial Association.[9][10] On the centenary of Seacole's death a memorial service was held on 14 May 1981 and since that time, the Memorial Association has maintained the grave site.[11] In 1989, when preparations were being made to celebrate the contribution of servicemen and women on the fiftieth anniversary of the war’s outbreak, Mark began lobbying for the inclusion of West Indians and women. In an interview conducted by Jacqui Harper for the program "Hear-Say" on the BBC, Mark expressed her frustration that the service of black Britons were not known. She applied for a grant from the Greater London Arts Council and put together an exhibit of photographs she was able to collect from service personnel and the archives of the Imperial War Museum for the anniversary celebration.[4][8] In 1992, Mark finally received her British Empire Medal for her meritorious service during the war.[4][9]

In 1993, Mark was notified that the British Government had created a bursary fund honouring Seacole to grant £25,000 annually for nursing leadership studies.[9] She continued her activism, participating annually in the Remembrance Day parade until her health no longer allowed her to do so. She was also well-known and respected for her poetry and participation in storytelling events to champion Caribbean culture. In 2001, she was honored as a member of the Order of the British Empire.[4]

Death and legacy

Mark died on 3 June 2007 at Charing Cross Hospital, following a stroke,[12] and her services were held on 22 June at St. Luke’s Church in West London.[1][13] Posthumously, a blue plaque, using the traditional spelling MacDonald of her forebear's name, was installed in her honour by the Nubian Jak Community Trust at Mary Seacole House in Hammersmith, former home of Mark.[10]

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