Pernel Strachey
Pernel Strachey | |
---|---|
Born | 1876 |
Died | 1951 |
Nationality | United Kingdom |
Known for | head of Newnham College |
Pernel Strachey or Joan Pernel Strachey (1876–1951) was an English scholar of French and a head of Newnham College.
Life
Strachey was born in Clapham Common in London in 1876. She came from a large family led by Lieutenant General Sir Richard Strachey and the suffragist Jane Maria Strachey. Her mother was a friend of Millicent Garrett Fawcett who had co-founded Newnham College in Cambridge.[1]
Strachey went to Allenswood School.[2] She was then a scholar of French after initially studying history at Newnham College in 1895. Her course was modern and medieval languages, but she was talented in French. By 1900 she was lecturing at Royal Holloway College in London after briefly studying in Paris. She returned to her alma mater in 1905 and by 1917 she was leading the modern and medieval languages department. In 1921 she used her suffragist background to help lead a campaign to get real degrees for women at Girton College and Newnham. The campaign failed.[1]
She became principal of the college in 1927.[2] She used her friendship with the Bloomsbury Group and Virginia Woolf to get Woolf to deliver a talk in 1928. Woolf stayed at Newnham[1] and her talk to the Newnham Arts Society was the basis for her essay A Room of One's Own.[3] Strachey retired in 1941.[2]
Strachey died in Gordon Square in London in 1951.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Rita McWilliams Tullberg, ‘Strachey, (Joan) Pernel (1876–1951)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 6 March 2017
- ^ a b c Pernel Strachey, National Archives, Retrieved 6 March 2017
- ^ Newnham Essay Prize, Newnham College, Retrieved 6 March 2017