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Personal Papers of Gwendolen Freeman, 1925 - 2001

 Fonds
Reference Code: GBR/0271/GCPP Freeman

Scope and Contents

The collection comprises a spectrum of GF’s life at Girton (1926-29) and is accompanied by her own detailed notes. It includes letters written to family and letters received from Cambridge luminaries, a draft of her book 'Alma Mater', and correspondence surrounding the book's publication. The letters home are very chatty and enthusiastic in style and contain many vivid details about her daily life and activities at Girton, something that also is to be found in 'Alma Mater'. Of special interest in the Cambridge collection of letters are those from distinguished academics such as FR Leavis.

Dates

  • Creation: 1925 - 2001

Creator

Biographical / Historical

Gwendolen Freeman had a liberal family background: she was the daughter of William Freeman and Lucy Constance Rimmington, a journalist and a teacher respectively, the granddaughter of a minor artist (also William Freeman) and the sister of a journalist and an artist. She was educated at Tiffin Girls’ School in Kingston-on-Thames where her mother had been a teacher, and came to Girton 1926-1929 as an Emily Davies Scholar to read English. During her time at Girton she achieved a First in Part I of the Cambridge Tripos and was awarded the Charity Reeves Prize. After completing Part II of the Tripos, GF had the opportunity to further her studies in English Literature in America but her mother, and family circumstances, persuaded her to pursue a career in journalism. She was very successful and worked for a variety of newspapers in London and the Midlands. In 1940 she became the Editor of ‘The Samaritan’ and then from 1953 she freelanced for the National Press - this, despite the limited scope for women in the profession at the time. During the latter stage of her career, she concentrated on writing books and had a prolific output. Her publications include poetry, fiction and 'Alma Mater', an autobiographical work based on her life at Girton. GF’s career also included official and charitable posts. During the Second World War, she worked as the Public Relations Officer for the Ministry of Labour in the Midlands Region (1941-1945) and was a Committee Member of the Birmingham Library (1940-1945). Throughout her career, she employed her skills as a journalist to write articles to promote charities, and between 1930 and 1945 she worked for the Birmingham Settlement, a charitable publication. She raised a family of adopted and foster boys while still in full-time employment, and had many grandchildren. Gwendolen Freeman died on 2 June 2007.

Extent

5 file(s) : paper

Language of Materials

English

Related Materials

A copy of Gwendolen Freeman's article in the 'Cambridge Review' is at GCRF 2/1/1/9.

Bibliography

Gwendolen Freeeman published an article based on her letters home, 'First Term at Girton 1926' in the 'Cambridge Review' 3 June 1983.

General

Description prepared by Harmony Lam, 2006.

Originator(s)

Freeman, Gwendolen, 1908-2007, author and journalist

Finding aid date

1998-09-03 13:40:49+00:00

Repository Details

Part of the Girton College Archive Repository

Contact:
The Archivist
Girton College Archive
Huntingdon Road
Cambridge CB3 0JG United Kingdom
+44 (0)1223 338897