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Verily Anderson
Verily Anderson
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Verily Anderson (12 January 1915 – 16 July 2010) was a British author, best known for writing the screenplay of the 1960 film No Kidding,[1] based on her 1958 book Beware of Children, for writing Brownie books and writing genealogical books about the Gurney, Barclay and Buxton families.

Key Information

Biography

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Born as Verily Bruce on 12 January 1915[2][3] in Edgbaston, Birmingham,[4] she was the daughter of Francis Rosslyn Courtenay Bruce and Rachel Gurney, the fourth of her parents' five children.[3]

Verily Bruce was educated at Edgbaston High School for Girls, Birmingham, between the ages of four and seven, then she attended Normanhurst School in Battle, Sussex. At 16, she attended the Royal College of Music in London. She was in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry between 1938 and 1941.

On 2 August 1940, she married Captain Donald Clive Anderson (1897–1957), thereafter using the name Verily Anderson for her writing. She achieved success at the age of 41, in 1956, with the publication of Spam Tomorrow, "a deft and frequently uproarious account of her wartime experiences on the home front...a new kind of memoir, one of the first to explore the lives of women in wartime."[1] The Andersons ran a holiday home in Sussex catering for children of parents living abroad – characterised by one newspaper as "infant pandemonium" because of its no-rules philosophy.[3] After her husband died, leaving five children aged from three to 15, Anderson wrote with increased vigour, and her 1958 book, Beware of Children, was adapted for the film No Kidding (1960) by the producers of the Carry On series, starring Leslie Phillips, Geraldine McEwan and Joan Hickson.[3]

Between 1946 and 2002, Anderson also worked with the BBC in TV and radio, on Woman's Hour and writing TV plays.

On 10 August 1971, she married Paul Edward Paget (1901–1985).

She last lived in Frogshall, Northrepps, Norfolk, where she died at home on 16 July 2010, aged 95, just after completing a book,[5] Castellans of Herstmonceux (1911-2010) (Bader International Study Centre, 2011).[6] She is buried with her husband Paul Paget in the neighbouring village of Sidestrand.

She had five children, including Rachel Anderson, author of children's literature, and Janie Hampton, author, radio producer and international health planner.[2]

Gurney family history and genealogy

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Anderson wrote two books about the Gurney, Barclay and Buxton families:

  • The Northrepps Grandchildren, published in 1968 (ISBN 1-898030-67-7); reprinted in 1979 and 2000.
    • Northrepps Hall is a converted farmhouse near Cromer, Norfolk, which has been occupied by the same family for more than eight generations and is now Grade II listed. Anderson's book is about the house and the families who lived there.
  • Friends and Relations: Three Centuries of Quaker Families, published in 1980 (ISBN 1-898030-84-7); a family history of the Gurney family, using information from family records.

Books

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Brownie books

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  • Towards the Golden Hand. A play for Brownies; 1948.
  • Magic for the Golden Bar A play for Brownies; 1953.
  • Amanda and the Brownies. Illustrated by Joan Milroy; 1960.
  • The Brownies and the Golden Hand. Illustrated by Edgar Norfield; 1963.
  • The Brownies and the Ponies. Illustrated by Edgar Norfield; 1965.
  • Brownies on Wheels, 1966.
  • The Brownies and the Wedding Day, 1974.
  • Brownies' Cook-Book, 1974.
  • The Brownies and the Christening, 1977.
  • Brownies' Day Abroad, 1984.

Other children's books

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  • Vanload to Venice. Illustrated by Margaret Ingram; 1961.
  • Nine Times Never. Illustrated by Edward Lewis; 1962.
  • The Yorks in London. Illustrated by Nathaniel Mayer; 1964.
  • Clover Coverdale, 1966.
  • Camp Fire Cook-Book, 1976.

Autobiography

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  • Spam Tomorrow, 1956.
  • Our Square, 1957.
  • Beware of Children, 1958.
  • Daughters of Divinity, 1960.
  • The Flo Affair, 1963.
  • Scrambled Egg for Christmas; line drawings by Marian O'Hare; 1970.

Non-fiction

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  • The Northrepps Grandchildren, 1968.
  • The Last of the Eccentrics: A Life of Rosslyn Bruce, 1972.
  • Friends and Relations: Three Centuries of Quaker Families, 1980.
  • The De Veres of Castle Hedingham, 1993.
  • Castellans of Herstmonceux (1911–2010), 2011 (ISBN 978-0956848307).

Film

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Beware of Children, 1960, renamed No Kidding in North America.[7] Directed by Gerald Thomas and starring Leslie Phillips, Geraldine McEwan and Julia Lockwood.[7]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Verily Anderson was a British author known for her humorous children's books, memoirs, and family histories drawn from her own eclectic experiences and aristocratic background. Born Verily Bruce in 1915 into the family of Henry Bruce, 3rd Baron Aberdare, she pursued writing after wartime service and running a household that included fostering maladjusted children, which inspired her most famous work, Beware of Children (1958). That debut book, a witty account of her efforts to manage a group of difficult boys in a makeshift home, became a bestseller and was adapted into the 1960 comedy film No Kidding starring Leslie Phillips. Anderson went on to publish numerous other titles for children as well as memoirs and biographical works, notably The Last of the Eccentrics (1973), a lively portrait of her great-aunt Daisy Greville, Countess of Warwick, and several books exploring her own family's history. Married to Captain Donald Anderson and mother to four children—including author Rachel Anderson and actress Jan Anderson—she continued writing into later life, blending sharp observation, gentle humor, and personal insight to chronicle both domestic chaos and aristocratic legacies. She died in 2010 at the age of 95.

Early life

Birth and family background

Verily Bruce was born on 12 January 1915 in Edgbaston, Birmingham, England. She was the fourth of five children of the Rev. Rosslyn Bruce and his wife Rachel (née Gurney). Her father was an Anglican clergyman. The family background included connections to established English families through her mother, which Verily Anderson later examined in her genealogical books.

Education and early interests

Verily Anderson received her early education at Edgbaston High School for Girls in Birmingham before continuing her schooling at Normanhurst School in Battle, Sussex. At the age of 16, she moved to London to study at the Royal College of Music, where she pursued formal musical training. She displayed an early and precocious interest in music, learning to read it at age four and famously practicing the violin while riding a bicycle—an indication of her unconventional approach even in childhood. Anderson also engaged in various eccentric pursuits during her youth, such as designing toffee papers and establishing an unofficial pack of Brownies. This early involvement with a Brownie pack later informed her children's literature on the topic.

Wartime service in FANY

Verily Anderson served in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) beginning in 1939. She was already involved when hostilities began in 1939, though she later admitted her heart had never been fully in the organization until the events of Dunkirk prompted a shift in her perspective. Anderson described herself as not very devoted to the role, noting that community life and discipline did not suit her and that she was not a good F.A.N.Y. either technically or socially. During her service, she faced a court-martial for a minor incident in which she backed a truck into a gatepost. Her time in the FANY ended when she went AWOL to marry Donald Anderson in 1940, with no initial plan to return to service. These wartime experiences, including her unconventional approach to military auxiliary duties, later informed her memoir Spam Tomorrow.

Personal life

First marriage and children

Verily Anderson married Captain Donald Clive Anderson on 2 August 1940. The couple had five children, including the authors Rachel Anderson and Janie Hampton. Captain Donald Clive Anderson died on 2 January 1957, leaving his wife widowed with the children ranging in age from approximately three to fifteen. To support her family after her husband's death, Verily Anderson ran a children's holiday home in Sussex. This experience of family life influenced her later memoir Beware of Children.

Second marriage and later years

Verily Anderson married the architect Paul Edward Paget on 10 August 1971. The wedding featured Joyce Grenfell as matron of honour and John Betjeman as best man, reflecting her connections within literary and artistic circles. In her later years, Anderson lived at Frogshall in Northrepps, Norfolk, where she maintained an independent and somewhat eccentric lifestyle. She was survived by five children, sixteen grandchildren, fourteen great-grandchildren, and her guide dog Alfie. She continued writing until the end of her life.

Literary career

Breakthrough memoirs

Verily Anderson achieved her literary breakthrough with the publication of Spam Tomorrow in 1956. This humorous memoir provided a deft and frequently uproarious account of her wartime experiences on the home front during World War II, including her marriage to Donald Anderson, frequent moves due to housing shortages, and the births of her first two children amid rationing and air raids. Elizabeth Bowen hailed it as a new kind of memoir—one of the first to explore the lives of women in wartime—and as a genuinely bizarre depiction of marrying and having babies during the conflict. The book's light-hearted tone, self-deprecating humor, and optimistic portrayal of domestic resilience distinguished it from more somber wartime accounts, earning it critical acclaim and bestseller status. Anderson followed this success with a series of similarly humorous autobiographical works that drew on her family life, child-rearing challenges, and personal anecdotes. These included Our Square (1957), which chronicled post-war chaos in a lively London household; Beware of Children (1958), detailing the couple's efforts to run a holiday home for children; Daughters of Divinity (1960); The Flo Affair (1963); and Scrambled Egg for Christmas (1970). Her memoirs consistently blended domestic disasters, shoestring budgeting for a family of five children, and cheerful anecdotes, often highlighting resilience in the face of hardship and appealing to readers with their optimistic spirit. Beware of Children was later adapted into the 1960 film No Kidding.

Children's literature and Brownie books

Verily Anderson wrote extensively for children, with her most prominent contribution being a series of ten Brownie books that chronicled the adventures of Brownie packs. These stories, published between 1948 and 1984, included Towards the Golden Hand (a 1948 play), Magic for the Golden Bar (1953), Amanda and the Brownies (1960), The Brownies and the Golden Hand (1963), The Brownies and the Ponies (1965), Brownies on Wheels (1966), The Brownies and the Wedding Day (1974), Brownies' Cook-Book (1974), The Brownies and the Christening (1977), and Brownies' Day Abroad (1984). Although popular with young readers for their engaging plots, the Brownie books were deemed too exciting by the Girl Guide Association for official endorsement. Among the series, The Brownies and the Ponies is notable as a pony-themed title, an uncommon element in her Brownie stories. In addition to the Brownie series, Anderson authored several other children's books, such as Vanload to Venice (1961), Nine Times Never (1962), The Yorks in London (1964), Clover Coverdale (1966), and Camp Fire Cook-Book (1976). Her early involvement with an unofficial Brownies pack influenced her focus on writing for young members of the Guiding movement.

Genealogical and biographical works

Verily Anderson produced a series of meticulously researched genealogical and biographical works, many of which explored her ancestral ties to prominent Quaker families known for their roles in banking, philanthropy, and social reform. These books reflected her commitment to truth-seeking and objective family history, often centering on Quaker connections and the legacies of reformist ancestors. Her first major work in this vein was The Northrepps Grandchildren (1968), which chronicled the descendants of the Buxton, Barclay, and Gurney families associated with Northrepps in Norfolk, bringing to life their interconnected stories as a lively family network. The book was reprinted in 1979 and again in 2000. In 1972, Anderson published The Last of the Eccentrics: A Life of Rosslyn Bruce, a biography of her father, the Rev. Rosslyn Bruce, portraying his unconventional life and personality. She continued with Friends and Relations: Three Centuries of Quaker Families (1980), which traced the history of the Gurney family and related Quaker lineages over three centuries, emphasizing their enduring influence and interconnections. In 1993, The De Veres of Castle Hedingham documented the history of the de Vere family linked to Castle Hedingham. Anderson's final genealogical work, Castellans of Herstmonceux (1911–2010), was completed the day before her death in 2010 and published posthumously in 2011, covering the modern history of the castellans of Herstmonceux Castle.

Film and broadcasting contributions

Screenwriting for film

Verily Anderson's book Beware of Children (1958) was adapted into the British comedy film No Kidding (1960), released in some markets under the title Beware of Children. Directed by Gerald Thomas and produced by Peter Rogers, the film starred Leslie Phillips as David Robinson, Geraldine McEwan as his wife Catherine, with supporting roles by Joan Hickson and Julia Lockwood. The screenplay was written by Norman Hudis and Robin Estridge, based on Anderson's semi-autobiographical memoir about a couple opening their country home to paying child guests. Anderson is credited for the original book but had no other credited roles in the production, such as screenwriter, producer, or director. This adaptation marked the primary film project connected to her literary work.

BBC radio and television work

Verily Anderson had some involvement with BBC broadcasting. In television, she is credited as writer of the 1953 BBC production The Persian Kitten, a TV movie adapted from her own short story. Limited public records show few other broadcasting credits. She interviewed Joyce Grenfell for the BBC, though the format (radio or television) and date are unspecified. Detailed additional writing contributions to radio or television remain sparsely documented.

Death and legacy

Death

Verily Anderson died aged 95 at her home in Northrepps, Norfolk. She completed her final memoir, recounting her time at Herstmonceux Castle in the 1930s and 1940s, the day before her death. Anderson was survived by her five children—Marian, Rachel, Eddie, Janie, and Alexandra—sixteen grandchildren, fourteen great-grandchildren, and her RNIB guide dog, Alfie. She was buried in St. Michael's Churchyard in the neighbouring village of Sidestrand, Norfolk. Her final book was published posthumously as Castellans of Herstmonceux.

Legacy and posthumous publications

Verily Anderson's prolific literary output encompassed more than 30 books across memoirs, biographies, children's stories, and genealogical works, establishing her as a versatile chronicler of personal and family history. Her wartime memoir Spam Tomorrow (1956) received particular acclaim for its humorous yet insightful depiction of women's experiences on the home front during World War II, with Elizabeth Bowen describing it as a new kind of memoir that pioneered attention to this perspective. Other domestic memoirs similarly remained popular for years, valued for their candid portrayal of postwar family life and women's roles in managing households under challenging conditions. Following her death in 2010, Anderson's final work, Castellans of Herstmonceux, appeared posthumously in 2011. This book combined memoir and local history to document the 20th-century story of Herstmonceux Castle in East Sussex, drawing on her childhood memories as the daughter of the local rector and her familiarity with its eccentric owners. She completed the manuscript the day before her death, dictating much of it in her 90s due to blindness. Anderson's legacy endures through her contributions to children's literature, particularly her Brownie series, and to genealogical scholarship via detailed family histories. Born into a family with a strong writing tradition, she exemplified resilience and eccentricity in her own life, while her memoirs continue to offer valuable historical perspectives on women's domestic and wartime experiences.

References

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