Helen Ashton

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Born
Helen Rosaline Ashton

(1891-10-18)18 October 1891
Kensington, London, England
Died27 June 1958(1958-06-27) (aged 66)
OthernamesHelen Ashton
OccupationsWriter, novelist and physician
Helen Rosaline Ashton Jordan
Ashton in 1934
Born
Helen Rosaline Ashton

(1891-10-18)18 October 1891
Kensington, London, England
Died27 June 1958(1958-06-27) (aged 66)
Other namesHelen Ashton
OccupationsWriter, novelist and physician
Years active1913-1958
SpouseArthur Jordan
Parents

Helen Rosaline Ashton Jordan (18 October 1891 – 27 June 1958) was a British novelist, literary biographer, and physician.

Helen Rosaline Ashton was born in Kensington, London, the daughter of Emma Burnie and Arthur Jacob Ashton, KC, Recorder of Manchester. Her brother was Sir Leigh Ashton, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum.[1][2]

She published her first novel in 1913, Pierrot in Town.[2] During World War I, she nursed as a VAD, and over the course of the war she published two more novels.

After the war, Ashton studied medicine, qualifying from the London Hospital in 1921 and graduating M.B., B.S. in 1922.[1] She was then a house physician at Great Ormond Street Hospital until she married Arthur Jordan, a barrister, in 1927. After her marriage, Ashton retired from medicine but continued to write.

Over forty-five years she published twenty-six books, which included a literary biography, I Had a Sister (written with her sister, Katharine Davies, in 1937 – a study of Mary Lamb, Dorothy Wordsworth, Caroline Herschel and Cassandra Austen), and several biographical novels, including William and Dorothy (1938) and Parson Austen's Daughter (1949). Her first major fictional success was Doctor Serocold (1930) in which she was able to draw upon her medical knowledge. Her other successful novels included Bricks and Mortar (1932), republished in 2004 by Persephone Books, and Yeoman's Hospital (1944), on which the 1951 film White Corridors was based.

She died at age sixty-six, on June 27, 1958, in Lechlade, Gloucestershire.[3]

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