Bella Sidney Woolf

Bella Sidney Woolf
OBE
Born1877
London, England
Died1960 (aged 82–83)
Oxford, England
Spouses
  • (m. 1910; died 1915)
  • (m. 1921; died 1957)
RelativesLeonard Woolf (brother)

Bella Sidney Woolf OBE (1877–1960) was an English author, sister of author Leonard Woolf and first married to Robert Heath Lock, and in her second marriage to Hong Kong colonial secretary and colonial Ceylonese administrator Tom Southorn.

Early life

Woolf was born in London, the eldest (or 2nd eldest) of ten children to Marie (née de Jongh) and the Jewish barrister Solomon Rees Sydney Woolf. Her father died in 1892.

At the end of 1907 she travelled to Ceylon to visit her brother, Leonard Woolf, then a junior civil servant stationed in Kandy.

First marriage

In the following months she met Robert Heath Lock, Assistant Director of the Peradeniya Botanical Gardens, near Kandy. They were married in 1910.[1] In August 1908, she went back to England with her brother, who was returning briefly before taking up a promotion as Assistant Government Agent of Hambantota. Robert Heath Lock died in 1915.

Second marriage

In 1921, aged around 44, she remarried, to Tom Southorn, whom she met in Ceylon through Leonard. In 1904 as a junior civil servant, Tom had met Leonard off the boat on his arrival in Ceylon. He served a long period in colonial service in Ceylon and rose to be colonial secretary of Hong Kong, Acting Administrator of Hong Kong on various occasions, and Governor of the Gambia.

From this time she sometimes went by the name Bella Woolf Southorn, and occasionally used Bella Sidney Southorn. But she continued to publish as Bella Sidney Woolf.

She greatly enjoyed her life as the wife of a colonial civil servant and was fascinated by all the places she lived, which informed her writing, both fiction and what we would now call 'tourist guides'.[2]

During her years in Hong Kong she was active in community work and was commissioner of the Girl Guides from 1926 to 1936. In 1935 she was appointed an OBE.

Author

Woolf wrote fiction and non-fiction. In both she drew on her experiences in her husbands' various colonial postings – to write stories and to write guides to the localities, customs and people. She also authored and co-authored on current events and science

Her How To See Ceylon was published in 1914, and incorporating her experience of car journeys with her husband "along the sunny roads of Ceylon" is considered the first pocket guidebook to the island. Three more editions followed in 1922, 1924 and 1929.[1]

While Tom was Governor of the Gambia, from 1936, she wrote a detailed history of the tiny West African territory.

Her approach was quite liberal for the day. She saw value in the cultures that the British Empire embraced and was concerned at what she perceived as their erosion. "It is unfortunate that so many natives are adopting English dress, blind to the fact that it destroys all their individuality and Oriental grace", she wrote, of Ceylon, and "Kandyan divorce laws are so enlightened that....".

Her short propagandist booklet Right against might; the great war of 1914, published in 1914, has been reprinted by the original publisher in modern times.

Much of Woolf's fictional writing was short stories drawn from her life as the wife of two colonial civil servants. Some of these were later compiled as Bits of Old China and Under the Mosquito Curtain.[2][3]

Woolf also wrote several children's books, all drawing on her various overseas experiences; The Twins in Ceylon and its sequels were very popular.

Works

  • Jerry & Joe, A Tale of Two Jubilees (Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier, Edinburgh, 1897)
  • All in a Castle Fair (Cassell, New York, 1900)
  • Dear Sweet Anne or The Mysterious Veres (Collins, probably 1900–1910)
  • Little Miss Prue (Cassell, London, 1907)
  • Golden House (Duckworth and Co., c1910)^
  • The Twins in Ceylon (Duckworth and Co., London, 1909, 1913) and sequels
  • How To See Ceylon (1st Ed: Visidunu Prakashakayo, 1914; 2nd Ed: Times of Ceylon Co, 1922; 4th Ed: Times of Ceylon Co, 1929) (ISBN 9559170511)
  • Right against might; the great war of 1914 (Cambridge, W. Heffer, 1914) (Reprinted: Pranava Books, 2009)
  • Eastern Star-Dust (Times of Ceylon, Colombo, 1922)
  • The Strange Little Girl (Thomas Nelson and Sons, London c1923)^
  • Chips of China (Kelly and Walsh Ltd, Shanghai, 1930)
  • From Groves of Palm (W. Heffer & Sons Ltd, Cambridge, 1925)^^
  • Bits of Old China and Under the Mosquito Curtain

[4][5]

^ sometimes credited to 'Woolf, Bella Sidney (Mrs. R. H. Lock)'
^^ credited to 'Woolf, Bella Sidney (Mrs. W. T. Southorn)'

Co-authored

  • Recent Progress in the Study of Variation, Heredity, and Evolution, (Robert Heath Lock, Leonard Doncaster, Bella Sidney Woolf) (Pranava Books, 1916. Reprinted Pranava Books, 2009)
  • Little Folks – The Magazine for Boys and Girls Volume 84 [1916], Geoffrey H. White. Eveline M. Williams. D. H. Parry. Nancy M. Hayes. Walter Copeland. Bella Sidney Woolf. Squirrel. et al. (Cassell and Co. Ltd, London, 1916)

References

  1. ^ a b ‘How To See Ceylon’ By Bella Sidney Woolf, Infolanka – History
  2. ^ a b Bella Southorn's stories reflect the life she loved as the wife of a colonial civil servant, Out and about, SCMP Post Magazine, Jason Wordie, 24 April 2011
  3. ^ Letter in Daily News, Sri Lanka Archived 14 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Listing, AbeBooks.co.uk
  5. ^ Library of Leonard and Virginia Woolf (listing)