Rachel Ferguson


Rachel Ferguson, was an English novelist, playwright and journalist. She wrote twelve novels, three memoirs, four satirical works, two biographies, and one play.

Life

Rachel Ethelreda Ferguson was born on 17 October 1892 at The Nest, Church Grove, Hampton Wick. She was the third child of Robert Norman Ronald Ferguson, a Treasury Clerk. She was educated at home and then sent to a finishing school in Florence, Italy. By the age of 16 she was a fierce campaigner for women's rights and considered herself a suffragette, "I was as militant as authority allowed me to be. I wanted to go to prison but was refused on the score of age." She went on to become a leading member of the Women's Social and Political Union.
In 1911 she became a student at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and began a career on the stage, which was cut short by the advent of World War I. Ferguson joined the Women's Volunteer Reserve and also took to writing in earnest. She wrote for Punch, and was the drama critic for the Sunday Chronicle, writing under the name 'Columbine'. In 1923 she published her first novel, False Goddesses, but it was not until 1931, when she published the absurdist novel, The Brontës Went to Woolworths, that she gained national recognition. She went on to write ten more novels.
Ferguson died in Kensington in 1957 at the age of 65. Five of her books remain in print to this day.

Works

Novels