Rosa E. Grindon

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Born
Rosa Elverson

1848
DiedMay 1923 (aged 7475)
MonumentsMedallion likeness and Shakespeare window at Manchester Central Library
Rosa E. Grindon
Born
Rosa Elverson

1848
DiedMay 1923 (aged 7475)
MonumentsMedallion likeness and Shakespeare window at Manchester Central Library
Alma materCheltenham Ladies' College
OccupationsActivist, suffragist, writer, lecturer
OrganizationManchester Shakespeare Tercentenary Association (founder)
SpouseLeopold Hartley Grindon (m. 1893)

Rosa Grindon (née Elverson; 1848 – 6 May 1923)[1][2] was a British activist, suffragist, and writer on Shakespeare, who established a national reputation as an authority on the playwright.[3][2]

Rosa Elverson was born in the Derbyshire village of Newhall, Derbyshire.[2] In her earlier life, she had a series of domestic roles, including working as a lady’s companion and as a housekeeper.[2]

One employer was the Mayor of Lichfield, John Gilbert, for whom she performed the duties of a Lady Mayoress.[2] With Gilbert’s daughter Florence, she helped transcribe medieval texts for the Early English Text Society.[2]

In 1889, Rosa earned the L.L.A. (Lady Literate in Arts) diploma in English, Botany, Geology, Physiology, and Geography from the University of St Andrews, studying from Cheltenham.[2]

Marriage and Manchester

Leopold Hartley Grindon

Rosa Elverson married naturalist Leopold Grindon on 8 August 1893,[4][5] moving to Manchester to live with him.[2] There, she became active in amateur academic, cultural, and social work, becoming an active member of the Manchester Naturalists’ Society (which Leopold had founded)[6] and the first woman to be elected to its Council.[2]

Grindon was a supporter of women's suffrage, attending meetings of the Manchester Society for Women’s Suffrage, and in 1913 becoming one of its Vice Presidents.[2] On the 1911 census, Grindon gave her occupation as "Lecturer & Suffragette".[7]

She was active as a lecturer, including for the Manchester Geographical Society, the Chester Society of Natural Science, and the Manchester Working Men’s Clubs Association, covering such topics as "the life history of a mountain", "Chaucer as field naturalist", and "the families of common plants".[8] She was a founding member of the Life Study Society (of which she was President for 21 years),[6] the Ladies’ Chess Club,[9] and became President of the Manchester Ladies Literary and Scientific Club (originally formed by Lydia Becker).[3][2] On her retirement, the Life Study Society was reconstituted as the Rosa Leo Grindon Society.[6]

Grindon was passionated about horticulture, and founded the Leo Grindon Flower Lovers’ Association in memory of her husband, who died in 1904.[2] She also played a leading role in forming the Manchester Tramwaymen’s Horticultural Society.[2]

Literary activity

Death and legacy

References

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