Winifred Stephens Whale
Winifred Stephens Whale (30 January 1870[1] - 8 September 1944[2]) was an English teacher, author, editor, journalist, and translator.[3][4] Early lifeSophia Charlotte Winifred Stephens[5] was born in Naunton, Gloucestershire on 30 January 1870, to Catherine and Reverend J. M. Stephens.[2] She was educated in France and at Tudor Hall School.[2][4] In 1923 she married solicitor, freethinker, and chairman of the Rationalist Press Association George Whale, who died suddenly in 1925.[2][6] The following year, with Edward Clodd and Clement Shorter, she published a volume in his memory.[2] During their marriage, the couple hosted a literary salon, which included guests such as, H. G. Wells, James George Frazer, and the political scientist Graham Wallas.[4][6] Whale wrote a number of books on French history and literature, as well as translations from the French by writers such as Anatole France.[2] Her works included The France I Know (1918) and Women of the French Revolution (1922).[2] She also wrote on the life of Marguerite de Valois.[4] Whale acted as honorary secretary for The Femina Vie Heureuse Prize (Prix Femina), awarded under the auspices of the Femina newspaper.[7] This annual prize was awarded for "the best work of imagination produced within a given time by one of the younger British authors or by one who is considered not to have received adequate recognition".[7] Whale was the maternal aunt of economist John Hicks, to whom she became a "second mother" and her Cotswolds house "his second home".[4] Whale gifted a large part of her "fabulous general library collection" library to her nephew, who - with his wife Ursula Kathleen Hicks - moved into Whales' house in 1946.[4] Death and legacyWinifred Whale died in Blockley on 8 September 1944.[2] For her obituary in The Times, a correspondent wrote:
BibliographyAs author
As translator
As editor
References
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