Rosa E. Grindon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1848
Rosa E. Grindon | |
|---|---|
| Born | Rosa Elverson 1848 |
| Died | May 1923 (aged 74–75) |
| Monuments | Medallion likeness and Shakespeare window at Manchester Central Library |
| Alma mater | Cheltenham Ladies' College |
| Occupations | Activist, suffragist, writer, lecturer |
| Organization | Manchester Shakespeare Tercentenary Association (founder) |
| Spouse | Leopold 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

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]

