Marjorie Josephine Maynard, Lady Garbett (23 January 1891 – 23 October 1975)[1] was a British artist and farmer who designed some of the first set of postage stamps issued in Iraq. In later life, she brought and lost a high-profile court case after being evicted from her farmstead.
Early life
Maynard's poem, "Laverstock Downs", and one of her cartoons, were published in Indian Ink in 1917 in aid of the Imperial Indian War Fund.[2][3] The cartoon depicting Belgium as a widow whose children have been killed by Germany, was praised by Pothan Joseph in an article in East And West magazine.[4][a]
The 1 rupee stamp was withdrawn on 1 June 1927 and replaced by one showing a portrait of King Faisal I, but the rest remained on sale until the introduction of a new set on 17 February 1931 and were still used postally after that.
Both Cheesman and Maynard appear to have been amateur artists.[5]
Farming career
Maynard purchased the 160-acre (65 ha) Horeham Manor Farm[c] and its farmhouse, an Elizabethan manor house,[7] at Horam in East Sussex, in 1949, for £12,500.[8][9][10] She worked the farm under her maiden name, with her daughter, Susan,[8] attempting to do so despite having limited experience and using hired contractors with no manager to oversee them.[11] The resultant poor farming standards led to multiple interventions by her local County Agricultural Executive Committee, starting in 1950, culminating with the farm being taken into government control in February 1956 through a "dispossession order" under powers conferred by the 1947 Agriculture Act.[8][11]
Marjorie Maynard, Lady Garbett, died on 23 October 1975.[1][8]
Notes
^Joseph describes the image as being in the style of Louis Raemaekers and depicting "Belgium as a widow clothed in the tatters of torment and holding the scourge in the attitude of a wide sweep— crying 'For my children/ Whom thou hast killed,/ Tortured and enslaved—/ Thou shall have bitter scourging./ GERMANY'", the quotation being the caption in the original.
^Cheesman designed the 0.5A, 1A, 4A, 6A, 8A, 2R, 5R and 10R stamps.
^ abcdeShort, Brian (2014). The Battle of the Fields: Rural Community and Authority in Britain During the Second World War. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 386. ISBN978-1-84383-937-8.
^Self, Peter; Storing, Herbert J. (1963). The State and the Farmer: British Agricultural Policies and Politics. University of California Press. pp. 124–126.
^ abcd"Law Report: Lady Garbett's Case Not One of "Bureaucratic Tyranny"". The Times. 31 January 1957. p. 3.