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Frances Donaldson
Frances Donaldson
from Wikipedia

Donaldson in the 1940s

Frances Annesley, Lady Donaldson of Kingsbridge (née Lonsdale; 13 January 1907 – 27 March 1994), was a British writer and biographer.[1]

Biography

[edit]

Her father was the playwright Frederick Lonsdale and her mother was Leslie Brooke (née Hoggan). She made an unsuccessful marriage to Ronald McKenzie Cardwell in 1927. In 1935, she married her second husband, John George Stuart Donaldson, known as Jack, who became Baron Donaldson of Kingsbridge in 1967. They had three children,[1] a daughter and two sons.[2]

During the Second World War when her husband was away she successfully took up farming,[2] producing record crop and milk yields. She was invited to broadcast in wartime[citation needed] and wrote several books about her experiences.[1][2]

Her body of work included topics such as farming and biographies on writers Evelyn Waugh and P. G. Wodehouse, and King Edward VIII.[1][2]

She died of cancer on 27 March 1994 in London.[1]

Works

[edit]
  • Approach to Farming (1941)[1][2]
  • Four Years Harvest (1945)[1]
  • Milk Without Tears (1955)[1]
  • Farming in Britain Today (1969) with J. G. S. Donaldson and Derek Barber[citation needed]
  • Freddy Lonsdale (1957) — Lady Donaldson's biography of her father,[1][2] "praised for its balance of candor and affection"[3]
  • Child of the Twenties[1] (1962)
  • The Marconi Scandal (1962)[1][2]
  • Evelyn Waugh: Portrait of a Country Neighbour (1967)[1][2] — An appreciation, rather than a comprehensive biography
  • Actor Managers (1970)[2]
  • Edward VIII (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1974) — Won the Wolfson History Prize in 1974, and was the basis for the seven-part television series Edward & Mrs. Simpson (1978),[1][2] starring her nephew actor Edward Fox as Edward[citation needed]
  • P. G. Wodehouse (1982)[1][2]
  • Yours Plum (1990) Letters of P. G. Wodehouse[1][2]
  • The British Council: the First Fifty Years (1984)[1][2]
  • The Royal Opera House in the 20th Century (1988)[1][2]
  • A Twentieth-Century Life (1992)[1][2]
  • Frances Donaldson: A Woman's War (2017) — An edition of her letters, written in 1939–1945 to her husband Jack. These precede all her published works, and although not originally written for publication, show her literary talent and interesting comment on events.[citation needed]

References

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from Grokipedia
Frances Donaldson Frances Annesley, Lady Donaldson of Kingsbridge (née Lonsdale; 13 January 1907 – 27 March 1994), was a British biographer and author known for her influential and award-winning biography Edward VIII (1974), which provided a groundbreaking reassessment of the former king's character, upbringing, and abdication, challenging romantic myths and emphasizing his irresponsibility and lack of understanding of constitutional duties. Born Frances Annesley Lonsdale in 1907 as the daughter of the prominent playwright Frederick Lonsdale, she married politician John George Donaldson (later Baron Donaldson of Kingsbridge) in 1935 and became Lady Donaldson of Kingsbridge. She began her literary career during World War II with a series of books on farming and rural life, reflecting her engagement with practical wartime issues before shifting to historical biography. Her biography of Edward VIII, drawing on primary sources such as letters and diaries from the king's close associates, won the Wolfson History Prize in 1975 and is widely regarded for its reasonable, sharply intelligent, and non-judgmental narrative that dismantled the notion of Edward as a victimized romantic figure while highlighting the abdication as largely self-inflicted. Donaldson also produced other notable works, including a candid biography of her father and explorations of British political scandals and royalty. She died of cancer in London on 27 March 1994 at the age of 87, leaving a legacy of meticulously researched biographies that combined insight with accessibility and influenced perceptions of modern monarchy.

Early life and family

Birth and parentage

Frances Donaldson was born Frances Annesley Lonsdale in 1907, the daughter of playwright Frederick Lonsdale and Leslie Hoggan. Her father was a prominent English dramatist known for his witty comedies and musicals in London's West End during the early 20th century, which provided her with early exposure to literary and theatrical environments. This background fostered her later interest in writing, as she grew up in a household connected to the creative arts through her father's successful career. She was a half-sister to the actress Angela Fox.

First marriage and early adulthood

In 1927, Frances Annesley Lonsdale, daughter of the playwright Frederick Lonsdale, married Ronald McKenzie Cardwell. The marriage was unsuccessful and ended in divorce, with the dissolution granted in November 1932 after approximately five years. Following the end of this first marriage, she lived as an independent adult during the years leading up to her second marriage in 1935.

World War II and farming

Managing the farm

During the Second World War, Frances Donaldson's husband John Donaldson served in the Royal Engineers, leaving her responsible for their farm in Warwickshire. While he was away on military service, she took up farming at Gipsy Hall Farm in Wilmcote, a 400-acre property she managed for the duration of the conflict. With two young children to care for, Donaldson faced significant challenges including antagonism from the male workers she supervised, persistent demands and pressure from the Ministry of Agriculture, the demands of raising her family, and severe financial constraints with limited resources. Despite starting with little farming experience and describing herself as emotionally fragile, she learned the work through hands-on effort and persevered as a determined achiever in a male-dominated field. She successfully ran the farm and rose to the top ranks of farmers during the war. Her role managing the farm under wartime pressures has been compared to historical women who defended and sustained family estates during periods of conflict. This practical experience formed the basis for her later writing on agricultural topics. The efforts at Gipsy Hall Farm resulted in publications and broadcasts on wartime farming.

Wartime farming publications and broadcasts

During World War II, Frances Donaldson managed a farm in Warwickshire while her husband served in the military, an experience that inspired her to publish practical guides on farming. Her first book on the subject, Approach to Farming, appeared in 1941 from Faber and Faber and chronicled her efforts as a novice farmer raising two young children and achieving self-sufficiency on the land. It proved remarkably successful and went through six editions. The sequel, Four Years Harvest, followed in 1945 and continued the account of her work at Gipsy Hall Farm in Wilmcote, Warwickshire, offering further reflections on wartime agriculture; it was regarded as one of the most widely circulated farming books of the era. In 1955 she published Milk Without Tears, a guide to the essentials of dairy farming that drew on her accumulated practical knowledge. Donaldson was also invited to broadcast about her wartime farming experiences, helping to promote self-sufficiency and agricultural efforts during the conflict, though details of specific programs remain limited.

Writing career

Farming and early non-fiction

Frances Donaldson continued to draw on her wartime experience of managing the family farm after World War II, publishing Milk Without Tears in 1955. This book, subtitled The Essentials of Dairy Farming, offered practical advice on dairy operations and served as the culmination of her sequence of hands-on agricultural guides that had begun during the war. Published by Faber & Faber, it reflected her ongoing commitment to sharing knowledge gained from running a successful dairy enterprise. She then shifted toward personal and family subjects with Freddy Lonsdale in 1957, a biography of her father, the prominent playwright Frederick Lonsdale. The book examined his life, from his origins to his success as a leading figure in London and New York theatre during the 1920s, discussing his wit, his creation of over twenty plays, and his place among the era's important dramatists. In 1962, Donaldson published Child of the Twenties, a memoir recounting her own early life and the distinctive attitudes and atmospheres of the 1920s and 1930s. The work provided a good-tempered reflection on her upbringing within the Lonsdale family and the social environment of the period.

Biographies of literary figures

Frances Donaldson produced a number of biographical works on literary figures with whom she had personal connections, offering intimate portraits informed by direct acquaintance. She published Evelyn Waugh: Portrait of a Country Neighbour in 1967, a memoir-like appreciation of the novelist who had been her near neighbor in Gloucestershire. The book emphasized her admiration for Waugh's writing and character. In 1982, Donaldson issued P. G. Wodehouse: A Biography, an authoritative life of the comic novelist whom she had known personally and whose stepdaughter was a friend. Drawing on insider knowledge, the biography explored Wodehouse's career, personal life, and the controversies surrounding his wartime broadcasts, while celebrating his distinctive humor and literary achievement. She later edited Yours Plum: The Letters of P. G. Wodehouse, published in 1990, a collection that presented Wodehouse's correspondence and further illuminated his personality and creative process through his own words.

Historical and institutional works

Frances Donaldson expanded her writing from farming topics to significant historical and institutional subjects starting in the 1960s. Her works in this area included detailed examinations of political scandals, theatre history, royal lives, and the development of key British cultural and international institutions. She published The Marconi Scandal in 1962, providing the first objective full-length account of the 1912 political controversy surrounding the Marconi Company's contract to establish an imperial wireless chain, which led to allegations of insider trading against several British ministers. In 1970, Actor Managers explored the tradition of actor-managers in British theatre, profiling key figures who controlled both performance and management in the industry. Donaldson turned to royal history with Edward VIII in 1974 and King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1977, an illustrated study of the monarch and his consort during their reign. Later commissioned works included The British Council: The First Fifty Years in 1984, a comprehensive history of the organization from its establishment through its first five decades. Her final contribution in this vein was The Royal Opera House in the 20th Century in 1988, chronicling the institutional evolution of the Covent Garden venue across the century.

Edward VIII biography

Research and sources

Frances Donaldson's biography of Edward VIII, published in 1974, distinguished itself through her access to previously unavailable primary materials that offered fresh insight into the subject's private life and motivations. The most significant of these were the revealing letters and diaries of Major Edward "Fruity" Metcalfe—Edward's equerry and closest male friend—and his wife Lady Alexandra Metcalfe, which Donaldson described as trump cards in her research. These private papers provided intimate details unavailable to earlier writers, enabling a deeper examination of Edward's character beyond official accounts or his own papers, to which she had no access. Donaldson drew on these documents to highlight contrasts between Edward's public statements and his private intentions, using them to illuminate discrepancies that shaped a more nuanced portrait of his decisions and personality. Her approach emphasized careful scrutiny of primary sources, combined with four years of reflection on the "strange man behind the Abdication," to pursue an objective understanding rather than judgment. She supplemented this with interviews, including one with Mrs Dudley Ward, Edward's early mistress, to build a balanced view grounded in firsthand evidence.

Publication and reception

Frances Donaldson's biography Edward VIII was published in 1974. It received the Wolfson History Prize the following year. The book was widely regarded as an authoritative and balanced account that challenged romanticized views of the abdication. Historian Elizabeth Longford observed that it had more effect than any other book on the future of the monarchy. Princess Margaret reportedly told a friend that it was "such a relief for all of us to have the true story told at last." It served as the basis for the 1978 television series Edward & Mrs. Simpson.

Television involvement

Advisory role on Edward & Mrs. Simpson

Frances Donaldson served as series advisor on the 1978 ITV miniseries Edward & Mrs. Simpson, a seven-part dramatization of the abdication crisis. She received this credit for all seven episodes, reflecting her advisory input during production to support the adaptation. The series drew from her biography Edward VIII, first published in 1974. In this capacity, Donaldson contributed expertise on the historical details and context portrayed in the program. Her involvement ensured the miniseries aligned closely with the documented events from her research.

On-screen appearances

Frances Donaldson made several on-screen appearances as herself on British television literary programs, primarily in the 1970s and 1980s, where she contributed her expertise as a biographer. In 1975, she appeared in one episode of the BBC series The Book Programme, a long-running show dedicated to discussions of books and authors. She later featured as Lady Frances Donaldson in the 1987 episode of the BBC arts documentary series Arena titled "The Waugh Trilogy Part 3: An Englishman's Home," part of a trilogy examining the life of Evelyn Waugh, in which she appeared alongside other contemporaries to offer personal recollections. In 1989, she appeared as Lady Frances Donaldson in the Bookmark episode "Plum," a Christmas Day broadcast that profiled the life and career of P.G. Wodehouse, drawing on contributors familiar with his work and including archive material of the author himself.

Personal life

Marriage to John Donaldson

Frances Donaldson married John George Stuart Donaldson in 1935. Her husband, later created Baron Donaldson of Kingsbridge in 1967, was a left-wing intellectual, social worker, and Gloucestershire farmer at the time of their marriage. Their marriage endured as a devoted partnership until her death in 1994. In her final years, her husband and children particularly noted her tolerance and warmth. During World War II, John Donaldson's military service required Frances to manage their farm, supporting their shared rural life.

Children and extended family

Frances Donaldson had three children—two daughters and one son—from her marriage to John Donaldson. In her later years, her children provided devoted support during her illness. She was survived by her three children and eleven grandchildren. Her half-sister was the actress Angela Fox, who was the illegitimate daughter of their father, the playwright Frederick Lonsdale. One of Angela Fox's sons, the actor Edward Fox, portrayed King Edward VIII in the 1978 television series Edward & Mrs. Simpson, adapted from Donaldson's biography of the king.

Death and legacy

Later years and autobiography

In her later years, Frances Donaldson continued her writing career with a focus on institutional and literary subjects. In 1988 she published The Royal Opera House in the Twentieth Century, a history of the institution. She followed this in 1990 with Yours, Plum, her edition of P. G. Wodehouse's letters, marking a continuation of her studies of literary figures. Despite being under the threat of illness by 1990, and encouraged by her devoted husband and children, Donaldson completed her autobiography, A Twentieth-Century Life, published in 1992. The book summed up her career enchantingly, serving as a reflective summary of her life and work as a biographer and writer. This autobiography represented the culmination of her productive later period, which had included sustained output into her eighties.

Death and legacy

Frances Donaldson died of cancer in London on 27 March 1994, at the age of 87. Her work as a biographer, particularly her rigorous and impartial approach to historical figures, has been noted for its enduring influence on public understanding of events such as the abdication crisis in her biography of Edward VIII.

References

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