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Jane Duncan
Jane Duncan
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Jane Duncan (10 March 1910 – 20 October 1976) was the pseudonym of Scottish author Elizabeth Jane Cameron, best known for her My Friends series of semi-autobiographical novels. She also wrote four novels under the name of her principal heroine Janet Sandison, and some children's books.

Key Information

Biography

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Elizabeth Jane Cameron was born in Renton, West Dunbartonshire on 10 March 1910[1] and brought up in the Scottish Lowlands. Her father Duncan Cameron was a police officer in the Vale of Leven, eventually as a sergeant.[1] He had a brother, George.[2] Her mother, Janet Cameron née Sandison died of influenza when Duncan was 10 years old, and her brother, John, was sent to live with their grandparents.[3] Her younger sister, Catherine, had already died when Duncan was 4 years old.[1] Her father brought her up and moved with his job, so Duncan attended Lenzie Academy in the area of Lenzie, East Dunbartonshire (thought to be one of the sources of 'Cairnton' of her novels), but much of her childhood was spent in the Highlands on the Black Isle in Easter Ross, on her grandparents' croft "The Colony" (said to be the "Reachfar" of her novels), where her brother John was (known locally as Jock).[2][1]

Her father married Christina Maitland, known as Kirsty. Duncan did not relate well to her stepmother.[1]

Duncan graduated M.A. in English from the University of Glasgow, including French, Moral Philosophy and Scottish History in her studies. During the Great Depression, when she left university at the age of 20, she had to take various jobs, as a nursemaid, a companion or as a secretary and later as a model.[1] She enlisted as World War II began to serve as a Flight Officer (Intelligence), WAAF alongside the choreographer Frederick Ashton. Her first posting was the Operations Room then promoted to an officer in Photographic Intelligence, officially at RAF Medenham, but possibly was a part of the top secret Bletchley Park codebreakers.[1]

After the war, she returned to secretarial work at James Cuthbert's engineering works in Biggar.[1] There Duncan met her lover, Alexander (Sandy) Clapperton, who was married to a Catholic woman and could not divorce.[2] But in 1949, both went to live in Jamaica for ten years (she also changed her surname to Clapperton). Sandy became chief engineer at Hampden Estates, the biggest sugar plantation on the island.[1] Duncan then began her career as an author,[3] although the juvenile works she had begun earlier had been burned.[1] Her first novel, My Friend Muriel was to a literary agent, during Sandy's terminal illness with heart disease, presumably in the hope of an income.[2] Sandy was able to know that she had a seven-book deal with Macmillan, by his 48th birthday, although he died a few months later.[1]

As a young 'widow', Duncan then returned to Scotland, to Jemimaville, near "The Colony", in 1958, to live with her uncle George, at Rose Cottage,[2] where she wrote her later novels. She bought up the nearby ruined old store and the ruined church, as well as taking on Rose Cottage, eventually, and worked in the Cromarty 'Friendly Shop' (named Achcraggan in her books).[2]

Her brother Jock Cameron and his children Seonaid, Neil, Donald and Ian lived in rural Aberdeenshire and Duncan visited them there. The youngest Ian had learning difficulties and Duncan helped the family accept him as well as assisting financially, so that her sister-in-law could keep all the children together and pay for help with housework.[2] Duncan later wrote about the Camerons (including a character based on Ian) in her children's books.[2]

Duncan died in Jemimaville of a heart attack, on 20 October 1976, shortly after finishing her final novel, and is buried in Kirkmichael cemetery, with the inscription with her real name in parentheses: "In memory of Jane Duncan (Elizabeth Jane Cameron). Author. Died October 1976. Age 66."[2] The Scotsman ran an article feature on Duncan after her death, in which her niece, Seonaid, noted that despite feeling 'a bit in awe of her', when writers such as Ian Grimble and Eric Linklater visited, had found in her aunt a real life confidante.  Her nephew, Iain, recalled that their 'Auntie Bet' was ' a really clever woman" and

'Very strong. She was very pro women and pro women fighting as equals in a man's world. A pretty indomitable character. If she got patronised, she would really go for people.'[2]

The Kirkmichael Trust now sells a booklet about her organised with Millrace Books, with an appreciation by Dr. Fiona Thomson of Leeds Trinity University, and organises tours for visitors.[4]

Writing

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In 1959, Duncan became something of a publishing sensation when Macmillan Publishers announced that it would be publishing seven of her manuscripts,[1] the first to be produced being My Friends the Miss Boyds. The nineteenth and last of the series, My Friends George and Tom, was published in 1976.

The biographical background to her writing is given in her Letter from Reachfar (1975), although also a selective view of her life.[5]

The My Friends series is narrated by Janet Sandison (her mother's maiden name) and follows the character's life from the World War I period through to the 1960s, depicting the people she encounters and showing how her crofting upbringing influences her in the society she meets and geographical locations she finds herself in, and was heavily based on her own life.[6]

In the four-novel Jean Robertson sequence (1969–75), notionally written by Sandison (who herself becomes an author), the heroine and part-narrator moves from bleak beginnings in the town of "Lochfoot" (based on Balloch, West Dunbartonshire) to become a house-servant in the interwar period, influencing for good the lives of many around her.[citation needed]

The five-book "Camerons" series for children have a contemporary setting (being inspired by the author's niece and nephews, "The Hungry Generation") and are notable for including the main character young Iain who has learning difficulties (Down Syndrome), one of the first novels to do so .[1]

Her Camerons on the Train was filmed as The Camerons (Children's Film Foundation, 1974).[7]

Reprints

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To mark the centenary of Jane Duncan's birth, Millrace Books have re-published My Friends the Miss Boyds,[8] launched at Waterstone’s bookshop in Inverness on Thursday 24 June 2010.

Critical attention

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Rita Elizabeth Rippetoe has written Reappraising Jane Duncan: Sexuality, Race and Colonialism in the My Friends Novels (2017).[6]

Bibliography

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Further reading

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jane Duncan is a Scottish novelist best known for her semi-autobiographical My Friends series of novels, written under her pseudonym and featuring the recurring narrator Janet Sandison. Her works, which draw heavily from her own life experiences across Scotland and Jamaica, achieved significant popularity following her breakthrough in 1959 when publisher Macmillan accepted seven of her manuscripts simultaneously. Born Elizabeth Jane Cameron on 10 March 1910 in Renton, West Dunbartonshire, she spent much of her childhood at her grandparents’ croft on the Black Isle, the setting she later fictionalised as Reachfar in her fiction. She graduated with a degree in English from the University of Glasgow and worked in various roles before serving as an intelligence officer in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force during the Second World War. After the war, she moved to Jamaica with her long-term partner Alexander Clapperton, where she began writing in earnest; following his death in 1958, she returned to Scotland and settled in Jemimaville on the Black Isle. Duncan’s My Friends series, beginning with My Friends the Miss Boyds in 1959 and continuing until her death, traces the life of Janet Sandison across diverse locations and themes, blending humor, social observation, and personal reflection. She also published additional novels under the name Janet Sandison, several children’s books, and an autobiography, Letter from Reachfar. Her writing, though now less widely read, engaged with contemporary issues including gender, colonialism, and personal identity, earning her a place as a distinctive voice in mid-20th-century Scottish literature. She died on 20 October 1976 in Jemimaville.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Family Background

Elizabeth Jane Cameron, who later wrote under the pen name Jane Duncan, was born on 10 March 1910 in Renton, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland. Her father, Duncan Cameron, worked as a police constable, while her mother, Janet Cameron (née Sandison), was also known as Jessie. Jane was the eldest child in her family and had two younger siblings: a sister named Catherine, who died during childhood, and a brother named John, known as Jock. When Jane was 10 years old, her mother died, leaving the family to cope with profound loss. Duncan Cameron later remarried, though details of this are not widely documented in primary biographical sources.

Childhood and Early Influences

Elizabeth Jane Cameron, later known as the author Jane Duncan, was raised primarily by her father after her mother died when she was ten years old. Her father, Duncan Cameron, a police officer whose work required frequent moves, raised her alone following the loss, though family circumstances led to her spending considerable time away from the immediate family home. Much of her childhood was spent at her grandparents' croft, known as "The Colony," situated on the Black Isle in Easter Ross, overlooking Udale Bay near Jemimaville. She frequently stayed there during holidays and extended periods, in the company of her grandparents and her much-loved "Uncle George," immersing herself in the rhythms of rural Highland crofting life. This croft served as the direct real-life basis for the fictional "Reachfar" estate in her semi-autobiographical novels, particularly the "My Friends" series and the Janet Reachfar children's books. The experiences of Highland family dynamics, community interactions, and close ties to the land at The Colony profoundly shaped her worldview and later fiction, providing a foundation of themes around belonging, resilience, and the interplay of family relationships that recur throughout her work. She regarded the Black Isle area as her spiritual home and the source of her creative inspiration, drawing deeply upon these early rural influences.

University Education

Jane Duncan attended Lenzie Academy before studying at the University of Glasgow from 1927 to 1930, earning an M.A. in English. Her studies also encompassed French, Moral Philosophy, and Scottish History. She completed her degree at the age of 20 in 1930, during the early years of the Great Depression. After graduating, Duncan took on a variety of jobs to support herself through the economic challenges of the 1930s. These included working as a nursemaid, companion, secretary, and model. Other accounts describe her early employment as including positions as a governess, companion, and secretary. This period of diverse and often precarious work preceded her later wartime service.

Wartime Service

Service in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force

Jane Duncan enlisted in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) at the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, among the first women to join the service. She initially served in an Operations Room, where her capabilities were identified and led to her promotion to officer status. In 1941, she transferred to Photographic Intelligence duties and was posted to RAF Medmenham in Buckinghamshire, the base of the Allied Photographic Interpretation Unit. At RAF Medmenham, she worked analyzing aerial reconnaissance photographs essential for planning Allied bombing raids and major troop landings. Duncan served as an intelligence officer during her WAAF service.

Intelligence and Operational Roles

Jane Duncan initially served in an Operations Room within the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, where her abilities were recognized. She was promoted to officer status and transferred to Photographic Intelligence, in which capacity she was officially posted to RAF Medmenham, the central hub for Allied photographic interpretation during the war. These assignments centered on operational coordination and intelligence analysis through aerial reconnaissance.

Life in Jamaica

Relationship with Alexander Clapperton

After World War II, Jane Duncan, then known as Elizabeth Jane Cameron, worked as a secretary at James Cuthbertson's engineering firm in Biggar, South Lanarkshire. There she met Alexander "Sandy" Clapperton, the works manager at the firm. Clapperton was married to a Catholic woman, and although separated, he could not obtain a divorce. Despite this obstacle, Duncan and Clapperton began a committed long-term relationship and chose to join their lives together. To formalize their partnership, Duncan changed her surname by deed poll to Elizabeth Jane Cameron Clapperton. In 1948, the couple relocated to Jamaica, where Clapperton assumed the role of chief engineer at Hampden Estates, the island's largest sugar plantation. They lived together there until his death.

Years at Hampden Estates

Jane Duncan relocated to Jamaica in 1948 with her partner Alexander "Sandy" Clapperton, where he served as chief engineer on a sugar plantation. They resided there until his death in 1958, during which she changed her surname to Clapperton by deed poll. Clapperton suffered from heart disease, and as his condition worsened, Duncan cared for him while secretly pursuing her writing ambitions. She concealed her manuscripts in a linen cupboard but completed seven novels during this period in Jamaica. Concerned about mounting medical expenses, Duncan submitted one manuscript to a London agent, securing a publishing contract shortly before Clapperton's death in 1958. Following his passing, she returned to Scotland in 1959.

Beginnings as a Published Author

Manuscript Submission and Macmillan Contract

During the final illness of her partner Alexander Clapperton, Jane Duncan submitted the manuscript of My Friend Muriel to a literary agent in an effort to find a publisher. In 1959, after reviewing this single manuscript, Macmillan Publishers offered her a highly unusual seven-book contract, recognizing the potential in her work. Duncan then informed the publisher that she had already completed six additional novels ready for publication. This contract marked her entry into professional publishing, with her first novel, My Friends the Miss Boyds, appearing in print in 1959. The agreement with Macmillan provided Duncan with a substantial commitment for a debut author, enabling the rapid release of her early works. This arrangement was notable in publishing history for its scale and the speed with which it brought her extensive backlog to the public.

First Novels and Early Recognition

In 1959, Macmillan Publishers announced a groundbreaking contract to publish seven novels by Jane Duncan, a deal that made publishing history and sparked widespread interest in the previously unknown Scottish writer. The London publishing house was besieged by reporters eager to cover the story of this new author, whose manuscripts had been accepted prior to any book reaching print. This unusual seven-book agreement established Duncan as a literary sensation of her generation and positioned her as a popular Scottish novelist. The announcement led to the rapid publication of the early entries in her "My Friends" series, which began appearing that same year and continued in quick succession. These initial novels, starting with My Friends the Miss Boyds, capitalized on the pre-publication buzz and achieved commercial success across global markets.

The "My Friends" Series

Series Overview and Narrative Style

Jane Duncan's "My Friends" series consists of 19 novels published between 1959 and 1976. The books are narrated in the first person by Janet Sandison, a semi-autobiographical character who closely parallels the author's own life experiences. The narrative structure is episodic rather than following a single continuous plot, with each novel centering on specific friends, relationships, and incidents in Janet Sandison's life. These stories are strongly character-driven, spanning decades and exploring the protagonist's encounters across various settings and stages of life. The style emphasizes personal reflection, witty observation, and detailed portraits of individuals over grand dramatic arcs.

Major Themes and Semi-Autobiographical Elements

Jane Duncan's "My Friends" series is semi-autobiographical in nature, with narrator Janet Sandison functioning as an alter ego for the author and drawing closely from her own life and experiences. The fictional croft Reachfar, a central setting in the series, is based on her grandparents' croft known as The Colony near Jemimaville on the Black Isle, where Duncan spent much of her childhood after her mother's early death. Many characters are drawn directly from family members and real-life acquaintances, lending the interpersonal relationships and community dynamics a strong sense of authenticity. Recurring themes include friendship, highlighted by the series' consistent title format and emphasis on the narrator's evolving bonds with a wide array of individuals. Independence emerges as a key motif, with the protagonist embodying self-reliance, ambition, and a refusal to conform to conventional paths. The series frequently explores women's roles, portraying female characters who assert equality and agency within a traditionally male-dominated society. A persistent contrast between rural and urban life runs throughout, as the moral and communal values of Highland crofting at Reachfar are set against encounters with urban modernity and other environments.

Additional Literary Works

Novels as Janet Sandison

Jane Duncan published four novels under the pseudonym Janet Sandison between 1969 and 1975. These works form a distinct series collectively known as An Apology for the Life of Jean Robertson, centered on the experiences of Jean Robertson, a maid living in Balloch. The pseudonym Janet Sandison derives from the name of the principal heroine in Duncan's "My Friends" series, who in that sequence eventually becomes an author, mirroring Duncan's own career in these later fictional explorations. The series comprises Jean in the Morning (1969), Jean at Noon (1971), Jean in the Twilight (1972), and Jean Towards Another Day (1975). These novels stand apart from Duncan's primary semi-autobiographical "My Friends" series, focusing instead on the separate narrative arc of Jean Robertson's life and circumstances in a Scottish setting. The tetralogy offers a reflective, character-driven portrayal of domestic service and personal development, distinct in tone and subject from Duncan's earlier works.

Children's Books

Jane Duncan also wrote children's books, including the five-novel "Camerons" series published between 1963 and 1968, featuring the Cameron family in semi-autobiographical adventures, as well as picture books for younger readers featuring the character Janet Reachfar. These works are distinct from her adult fiction and draw on similar settings and themes from her life.

Autobiography and Other Publications

Jane Duncan published her autobiography, Letter from Reachfar, in 1975 through Macmillan. This work serves as her memoirs and explores the relationship between her personal experiences and the semi-autobiographical elements in her fiction, providing biographical background to her writing. Described as a short autobiography, it details the connections between her life and her novels in a direct manner. No other major non-fiction publications by Duncan are documented in reliable sources.

Children's Literature and Screen Adaptation

The Camerons Series

The Camerons series consists of five children's novels by Jane Duncan, published between 1963 and 1968. The books follow the adventures of the Cameron siblings and draw inspiration from Duncan's own niece and nephews, the children of her brother Jock, who reportedly encouraged her to write stories about them. The series titles are Camerons on the Train (1963), Camerons on the Hills (1963), Camerons at the Castle (1964), Camerons Calling (1966), and Camerons Ahoy! (1968). A distinctive feature of the series is the youngest Cameron child, Iain (also spelled Ian), who is portrayed as a special and valued family member. This character is based on Duncan's real-life nephew Ian, who was born with Down's syndrome, and reflects her close relationship with him and her support for the family during his early years. One entry in the series, Camerons on the Train, was adapted into the 1974 film The Camerons, produced by the Children's Film Foundation.

Janet Reachfar Picture Books

Jane Duncan wrote three picture books for young children featuring the character Janet Reachfar, a young girl living on the Reachfar farm in the Scottish Highlands. These stories draw from the same semi-autobiographical setting as her "My Friends" series, with Reachfar representing the croft where Duncan spent much of her childhood with her grandparents on the Black Isle. Illustrated by Mairi Hedderwick, whose artwork significantly enhances the narratives, the books were published in the 1970s and aimed at younger readers with simple moral lessons conveyed through engaging visuals and text. The first book, originally published as Brave Janet Reachfar in 1975 and later reissued as Herself and Janet Reachfar, tells of Janet disobeying her grandmother "Herself" by venturing onto a forbidden hill during a sudden snowstorm to rescue a lost sheep, only to become lost and require rescue herself. Janet Reachfar and the Kelpie (1976) centers on Janet doubting tall tales from farmhands Tom and George about mythical creatures, including Black Rory in the quarry, the Whigmaleerie in the bog, and a kelpie in the well; her decision to investigate the well leads to a terrifying vision, nightmares, a stern confrontation with "Herself," and a moral outcome that humbles the tale-tellers as well. The third book, Janet Reachfar and Chickabird (1978), focuses on Janet's carelessness injuring a chicken, forcing her to face responsibility and decide the bird's fate. These tales highlight themes of curiosity, obedience, and accountability in a gentle, Highland setting suited to picture-book format.

The Camerons (1974 Film)

The Camerons is a 1974 British children's adventure film produced by the Children's Film Foundation. Directed by Frederick Wilson and featuring a screenplay by Patricia Latham, it adapts Jane Duncan's 1963 novel Camerons on the Train, the first book in her series of children's stories centered on the Cameron family. Duncan receives credit for the original novel as the source material. There is no record of her involvement in writing the screenplay, directing, or any other production role. The film follows three children on holiday who discover and foil a plot to hijack a secret jet aircraft. This production represents Duncan's only known screen credit.

Later Years and Legacy

Return to Scotland and Settlement in Jemimaville

Following the death of her long-term partner Alexander "Sandy" Clapperton in Jamaica, Jane Duncan returned alone to Scotland in 1958. She settled in the village of Jemimaville on the Black Isle, close to her family's former croft known as The Colony. She initially lived at Rose Cottage with her uncle George. Later, Duncan acquired and renovated The Old Store, a former ruin on the tip of the bay in Jemimaville, converting it into a fine house. She also purchased the remnants of an old church, reportedly for the sake of privacy rather than redevelopment. In the summer months, she worked part-time at The Friendly Shop in nearby Cromarty, where she sold her own home baking. She regarded Jemimaville as her spiritual home and the source of her creativity. She continued writing her novels during this period of her life.

Final Works and Death

Jane Duncan continued writing her long-running "My Friends" series of semi-autobiographical novels into the mid-1970s, producing works that maintained the distinctive narrative voice and character-driven storytelling that defined her career. Her final contribution to the series was My Friends George and Tom, published in 1976 shortly before her death. Duncan died on 20 October 1976 in Jemimaville of a heart attack, at the age of 66. She is buried in Kirkmichael cemetery.

Posthumous Recognition and Reappraisal

Following Jane Duncan's death in 1976, her extensive body of work—including the 19-novel "My Friends" series—gradually went out of print, leaving most titles unavailable for nearly four decades and resulting in a period of relative neglect despite her earlier commercial success. Renewed interest emerged around the centenary of her birth in 2010, when Millrace Books reissued My Friends the Miss Boyds (1959), the first book in the series, as a centenary publication that incorporated personal memories of Duncan from her nephews and niece. These family recollections portrayed her as a very strong, pro-women individual who fought as an equal in a man's world and as a pretty indomitable character who would not tolerate being patronised. The Kirkmichael Trust has helped preserve Duncan's legacy in the Black Isle region—where she settled in Jemimaville and is buried—through the sale of a booklet about her life and work (organised in collaboration with Millrace Books and including an academic appreciation) and by arranging guided tours for visitors. The centenary year also featured public events such as the Black Isle Word Festival, which included talks and an exhibition devoted to her contributions. Scholarly reappraisal gained momentum with the 2017 publication of Rita Elizabeth Rippetoe's Reappraising Jane Duncan: Sexuality, Race and Colonialism in the My Friends Novels, which examines the semiautobiographical series through lenses of feminist motifs, women's education and work, racial dynamics in the West Indies, and colonial perspectives—arguing that Duncan's perceptive social commentary was undervalued by postwar critics who dismissed her novels as lightweight.

References

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