Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Ruth Ainsworth

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Ruth Ainsworth


Role
  
Writer

Ruth Ainsworth Ruth Ainsworth British author of childrens literature

Died
  
May 16, 1984, Corbridge, United Kingdom

Books
  
The ten tales of Shellover

Ruth Ainsworth (16 October 1908 – 16 May 1984) was a British writer, of over seventy children's books and numerous radio scripts.

Contents

Life

Ainsworth was born in Manchester, in 1908, the second child (and first daughter) of Methodist minister Rev. Percy Clough Ainsworth and Gertrude Fisk of Pendleton, her older brother being mycologist Geoffrey Clough Ainsworth.

Ainsworth's father died on 1 July 1909 from typhoid aged 36. Soon after the family moved to 2 High Cliff Villas, Cobbold Road, Felixstowe. Ainsworth enrolled at Ipswich High School, Woolverstone where she studied between September 1924 and July 1926. She later attended the Froebel Training Centre in Leicester.

On 29 March 1935 she married chemist Frank Lathe Gilbert in Leicester. On 7 September 1936 she gave birth to twin sons: Christopher Gallard Gilbert (furniture historian and museum curator) and Oliver Lathe Gilbert (ecologist and lichenologist). She had a third son Richard Frank Gilbert.

The Gilberts initially settled in London, but their house was bombed in World War II. They relocated to Porthmadog. Latterly theGilberts lived in Corbridge, Northumberland.

Ainsworth died in 1984 aged 75. Her ashes were scattered in a stream in Wasdale.

Work

Ainsworth re-told classic fairy tales, as well as new stories of her own.

Ainsworth was a scriptwriter for Listen with Mother, a popular BBC children's programme. Some were published as Ruth Ainsworth's Listen with Mother Tales. Astrid Walford (illustrator). William Heinemann. 1951. .

Some of her stories were televised as marionette plays.

References

Ruth Ainsworth Wikipedia