Sneha Girap (Editor)

Rosemary Manning

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Rosemary Manning


Role
  
Author

Died
  
1988, Royal Tunbridge Wells, United Kingdom

Books
  
Green Smoke, Dragon in Danger, The Chinese garden, The dragon's quest, Dragon in the Harbour

Rosemary Joy Manning (b. Weymouth, Dorset 9 December 1911 – 5 April 1988, Tunbridge Wells) was a British author of both adult and children's books. Her best-known novel is The Chinese Garden which is an important lesbian book. She was also well known for her popular Dragon children's series. She was also known by the pseudonyms Sarah Davys and Mary Voyle.

Contents

Life

Manning was born in 1911 to Thomas and Mary in Weymouth. Her father was a doctor but he had to resign following a scandal. Manning was sent to a boarding school in Devon which she later described in her novel "The Chinese Garden". In the book the schoolgirl has an affair with her housemistress and tries to kill herself. She studied at Royal Holloway College from 1930 to 1933 and graduated with a 2nd class honours degree in Classics.

Career

She first worked in an Oxford Street department store then as a secretary In the 1930s, unhappy at work she suffered a nervous breakdown and was unsuccessfully treated at the Maudsley Hospital by unsympathetic doctors due to her lesbianism. Her former headmistress offered her teaching work and she stayed as a teacher for a further 35 years. In 1950 she moved with a friend to Hampstead, north London, to take over a long-established girls' preparatory school and became headmistress.

In 1962 she broke up with her partner and in April she tried to kill herself using the drug Luminal. However a suicide note was delivered promptly by the post office and help arrived. She was sad to find that she had failed. Later that year she published The Chinese Garden which is mentioned above. The book is considered important as a lesbian novel.

She later took up writing, After retirement, she came out as a lesbian during a television interview in 1980. In 1985 when the Greater London Council launched their Changing the World Lesbian and Gay Charter Manning was there at the launch. She appeared with Miriam Margolyes, Valerie Wise, Ken Livingstone, Jenni Fletcher and Jimmy Somerville.

References

Rosemary Manning Wikipedia