Jose Shercliff
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November 2, 1902
Jose Shercliff | |
|---|---|
| Born | Josephine Alfreda Lilley Shercliff November 2, 1902 |
| Died | January 21, 1985 (aged 82) |
| Occupations | Journalist; author |
Jose Shercliff (1902 – 1985) was a British journalist who worked in Paris and Lisbon as a foreign correspondent for several newspapers and magazines.
Josephine Alfreda Lilley Shercliff was born on 2 November 1902 in Burton upon Trent, England, the daughter of a brewer. The family home, which was leased from the British fascist Sir Oswald Mosley who lived nearby, was at Rolleston on Dove near Burton. Shercliff went to boarding school in Lincoln. She then was accepted by the University of Oxford, at a time when it was extremely unusual for women to go to university, obtaining a BA degree in English literature in 1924. At the university, she was a member of the Society of Oxford Home Students, which offered lodging in houses in Oxford rather than in halls of residence. This later became St Anne's College.[1][2][3][4]
Paris

After graduating, she obtained a job in London with the Daily Express, initially as a secretary but then taking on journalism work, writing about fashion. In the early 1930s she left the United Kingdom, and rarely returned for any length of time. She first lived in Paris, working as a secretary at the American Library, where she met many of the American writers who lived in that city at that time. She continued her career in journalism in France as an assistant to the correspondent of the Daily Herald. One of her jobs was to locate former Moulin Rouge can-can dancer, Jane Avril, who had been the muse of the painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, which she successfully did. Their long discussions led to Shercliff publishing a book about Avril in 1952, using illustrations from Lautrec's work.[1][2][3][4][5]
Barcelona
Shercliff, who also worked for the News Chronicle, was then sent to Barcelona in 1936 to cover the People's Olympiad, which was planned as a protest against the 1936 Summer Olympics being held in Nazi Germany. However, the People's Olympiad did not take place because the Spanish Civil War broke out. Shercliff now inadvertently became a war correspondent, sending vivid accounts of the fighting back to the Daily Herald, smuggling her copy out of Spain with the help of willing travellers. Staying in Barcelona for three weeks, she was briefly arrested on suspicion of being a spy.[5]