Beatrice Grimshaw
Beatrice Ethel Grimshaw (3 February 1870 – 30 June 1953) was a popular writer and traveller of Irish origin.
Life[]
Grimshaw was born in Cloona House[1] in Dunmurry, County Antrim, Ireland into a well-to-do family. Her parents were Nicholas William Grimshaw of Belfast, a wine-and-oil merchant, and Eleanor Grimshaw (née Newsam) of Cork. She was the forth of six children.
Grimshaw was educated privately, first at Victoria College, Belfast, at the Pension Rétaillaud in Caen, France, then Bedford College, London and Queen's College, Belfast but never took a degree.[2] though it was later claimed she had been a lecturer in Classics at Bedford Women's College.[3] Her family were members of the Church of Ireland, but she converted to Catholicism after leaving home.
Grimshaw defied her parents' expectations to marry or become a teacher, instead working for various shipping companies including as a publicist for the Cunard Line. She was an outdoor enthusiast and had a keen interest in bicycling, undertaking long cycle rides culminating in a record 338 km ride in a 24-hour marathon. In 1891, Grimshaw began her writing career when she became a sports journalist for Richard J. Mecredy's Irish Cyclist magazine, later becoming a sub-editor. She then took over the magazine's sister publication, the Social Review, which she edited until 1903, publishing a range of content including poems, dialogues, short stories, and two serialised novels under a pen name.[4]
Grimshaw had long harboured a desire to travel the world, especially the largely unexplored Pacific Ocean, and in 1903 she was engaged by the Daily Graphic to report on the Pacific.[2] She was commissioned to write travelogues for shipping companies to promote the Cook Islands, Fiji, Niue, Samoa, and Tonga.[2] After a brief trip to Ireland and England, Grimshaw sailed to Papua on a commission from The Times and the Sydney Morning Herald,[2] intending to stay a few months but remained for twenty-seven years, much of the time at .[5][6] She became a close friend of Lieutenant-Governor Sir Hubert Murray and his unofficial publicist. The Australian government commissioned her to write a pamphlet, The New New Guinea to promote the country to new settlers.[7] Grimshaw had a keen sense for adventure and joined exploration parties into the jungle and up the Sepik and Fly Rivers, and, in 1933, she established a tobacco plantation with her brother Ramsay.[2] After a period of illness, she moved to Kelso, New South Wales in 1936 with her brothers Ramsay and Osborne.[2]
Grimshaw was a prolific writer and her works were published in various newspapers and magazines. Her books often ran in multiple editions and become bestsellers in Australia, the United States, and England. Her first novel, Broken Away, published in 1897, was described as a 'New Women' novel, a feminist ideal Grimshaw identified with.[8] In 1907, she published two non-fiction books detailing her experiences, From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands and In the Strange South Seas, illustrated with her own photographs. In the same year, she also published Vaiti of the islands, a fictionalised account of a young adventurous travelling woman.[9] This adventure and romance novel is typical for Grimshaw's later writing featuring the unique landscape of the South Pacific islands.[8] Grimshaw also explored other genres such as crime fiction with works including Murder in Paradise and The Missing Blondes, and supernatural themes such as witch doctors The Sorcerer's Stone and ghosts in several of her short stories.[8]
Grimshaw's writing has been the subject of some academic study, mostly about the exotic view of her life and topics.[10] Well received at the time of publication, her works have been critised for their paternalistic and racist overtones. There has also been a study of her writing technique, particularly with proverbs, focusing on The Sorcerer's Stone.[11]
Films[]
- The Adorable Outcast (1928) was based on her 1922 novel Conn of the Coral Seas [12]
Publications[]
Fiction[]
- Broken Away (1897)[2]
- Vaiti of the Islands (1907)
- When the Red Gods Call (Mills & Boon, 1911)
- Guinea Gold (1912)
- The Sorcerer's Stone (Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1914) Online access
- Coral Queen (1919)
- White Savage Simon (1919)
- Queen Vaiti (New South Wales Bookstall Co. Ltd., 1920)
- The Terrible Island (1920)
- The Little Red Speck and Other South Sea Short Stories (Hurst and Blackett, London, 1921)
- The Land of Never-Come-Back and Other Stories (Hurst and Blackett, London, 1923)
- The Sands of Oro (1923)
- Nobody's Island (1923)
- Conn of the Coral Seas (Hurst and Blackett, Ltd., Melbourne, 1922)[13]
- The Candles of Katara (1925)[14]
- Eyes in the Corner and Other Stories ((Hurst and Blackett, London, 1927)
- The Paradise Poachers (1928)
- The Beach of Terror and Other Stories (Cassell & Co, London, 1931)
- Pieces of Gold and Other South Sea Stories (Cassell & Co, London, 1935)
- Murder In Paradise (1941)
- The Missing Blondes (1945)
Non-Fiction[]
- From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands (1907)[15]
- In the Strange South Seas (1907)
- The New New Guinea (1910) Online access
- Isles of Adventure (1930)
Further reading[]
- The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature (2nd ed.) Oxford University Press, Melbourne 1994
- McCotter, Clare: "An Elizabeth of the Pacific: The Monarch in Motion in Beatrice Grimshaw's Travel Writing", The Irish Review 39, Winter 2008
- Reeve, Victoria: "Gothic Moods and Colonial Night Guests: Beatrice Grimshaw's Writings on Fiji" in Da, Devaleena and Sanjutka, Dasgupta (eds): Claiming Space for Australian Women's Writing, Plagrave Macmillan, London, 2017
- Eugénie and Hugh Laracy: ‘Beatrice Grimshaw: pride and prejudice in Papua’, Journal of Pacific History, xii, 1977
References[]
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-09-03. Retrieved 2012-04-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Laracy, Hugh. Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 8 October 2018 – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- ^ "Beatrice Grimshaw". The Queenslander. 22 October 1921. p. 3. Retrieved 28 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Grimshaw, Beatrice (1930). Isles of Adventure. London: Herbert Jenkins.
- ^ "Miss Beatrice Grimshaw". The Cairns Post. Qld. 25 June 1925. p. 4. Retrieved 29 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Duncan, Joyce. 2002. Ahead of Their Time: A Biographical Dictionary of Risk-taking Women, pp. 171-172. Greenwood Publishing Group.
- ^ Byrne, Angela. "Beatrice Grimshaw, the Belfast explorer treated as a 'male chief' on Samoa". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2021-06-27.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Doig, James (2019). "Beatrice Grimshaw (1870-1953)". The Green Book: Writings on Irish Gothic, Supernatural and Fantastic Literature (13): 52–56. ISSN 2009-6089.
- ^ "DIB Explorers: Beatrice Grimshaw, author and traveller". Royal Irish Academy. 2020-07-30. Retrieved 2021-06-27.
- ^ Academic evaluations of her work
- ^ Unseth, Peter. 2020. Beatrice Grimshaw's proverb splicer and her artful usage of proverbs. Proverbium 37:341-358.
- ^ "Beatrice Grimshaw". IMDb.com. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
- ^ "Beatrice Grimshaw". The Queenslander. 29 July 1922. p. 3. Retrieved 28 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Beatrice Grimshaw". The Queenslander. 18 July 1925. p. 3. Retrieved 28 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Mini-review of From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands by Beatrice Grimshaw". The Academy. 72 (1816): 198. February 23, 1907.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beatrice Grimshaw. |
- Works by Beatrice Grimshaw at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Beatrice Grimshaw at Internet Archive
- Works by Beatrice Grimshaw at Faded Page (Canada)
- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
- Beatrice Grimshaw, South Pacific Adventurer, Travel Writer and Novelist
- Evaluations of the Work of Beatrice Grimshaw by Academic Analysts
- 7 Letters to Alfred Deakin - Australian Prime Minister
- Plaque honoring Grimshaw in Bathhurst, Australia
- 1870 births
- 1953 deaths
- 19th-century Irish novelists
- 19th-century Irish women writers
- 19th-century Irish writers
- 20th-century Irish women writers
- 20th-century Irish writers
- 20th-century Irish novelists
- Alumni of Bedford College, London
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
- Irish travel writers
- Irish women non-fiction writers
- Irish women journalists
- Irish women novelists
- Irish emigrants to Papua New Guinea
- Papua New Guinean novelists
- Papua New Guinean women writers
- People from County Antrim
- Roman Catholic writers
- 19th-century travel writers
- 20th-century travel writers
- Women travel writers