WSG Mentoring scheme, 2023-2024: The Mentee’s Experience by Clare Burgess

I have found the midpoint of a PhD a dangerous no-man’s land. Far enough away from the start to have lost the initial enthusiasm and naïve optimism, and too far from the end of the marathon to take advantage of the ‘last push’ energy that carries many of us through. In that lull of second year, I searched for some sort of guidance or programme that might allow me to find a way through, and found the WSG mentoring scheme. Given how busy my supervisors were – both on research leave – this seemed a good way of marking my progress and of getting guidance.

I was quickly assigned Vicki as a mentor, and have since found our meetings incredibly affirming and helpful. Removed from the formal setting of the traditional supervisor-supervisee relationship, and comfortable in the knowledge that Vicki wasn’t judging my progress, the relationship felt much more like a partnership. The usual power dynamics felt distant from our casual and encouraging chats, and Vicki seemed just as willing to learn from me as I was from her. She asked questions from interest, not just to test my knowledge, and I didn’t fear not knowing the answers. She helped me through writing and editing my first chapter for publication, and through a funding application, but more importantly, she helped me navigate the unwritten rules of academia – what was acceptable to ask, how would a certain request be viewed, what were the expectations in a given situation. I found this invaluable, and it’s something that I think the scheme is really disposed to. Having someone who’s been there before, who has asked the same questions, and in whose presence you feel no pressure to perform, has been of huge benefit.

Vicki’s guidance steered me through an odd phase, devoid of landmarks, and helped me further in navigating academia, and as such has set me up well for the last stage of the PhD, and hopefully for the next steps after that. I think the mentoring scheme – with a mentor like mine who eschewed the traditional hierarchy of mentor and mentee – can be a rewarding and helpful experience with tangible benefits for both participants.

They Run with Surprising Swiftness: The Women Athletes of Early Modern Britain. By Peter Radford. Review by Carolyn D. Williams

They Run with Surprising Swiftness: The Women Athletes of Early Modern Britain. By Peter Radford. Charlottesville and London: University of Virginia Press. 2023. Pp 296. £31.79 (paperback), ISBN 9780813947938.

Readers of Peter Radford’s previous work, including his chapter entitled ‘Better than the Men’ in Exploring the Lives of Women (2018), a collection of essays by members of the Women’s Studies Group 1558–1887, will expect great things from his latest publication. They will not be disappointed.

This fascinating and wide-ranging study of women’s past achievements in sports and athletics, as well as other forms of physical activity demanding various combinations of strength, skill, courage and endurance, incorporates a forceful defence of their ability and right to participate in these activities today. We are currently emerging from a period when women’s participation in sport was restricted on the grounds that strenuous exertion would threaten their capacity for motherhood or even their physical survival. Radford has unearthed evidence of ‘a kind of cultural amnesia’ (208) that seems to have been fostered by nineteenth-century masculine anxieties, obliterating awareness of traditional female sports. The chapter headed ‘Moral Meddling, Cant, and Sheer Humbug: 1825 Onward’ gives a painfully eloquent account of this turning point. As he shows elsewhere in his book, the participants were often subjected to various forms of misogynistic prejudice, but at least the existence of these events was acknowledged.

As in previous work, Radford counters this great forgetting. After producing evidence for women’s robustness in the Neolithic period, and their versatile athleticism in Ancient Greece, he provides detailed studies of events involving female runners, and occasionally walkers, concentrating on the period 1638–1850. A theme that should inspire interest in other feminist historians is the rise and fall of the smock race, and its connections with skimmington rides. He then discusses women’s involvement in football, cricket, prize-fighting (with swords and fists), equestrianism and tennis: women in the last two categories beat the best male professionals.

Some of the book’s findings cast new light on established disciplines. Analyses of the pictures of sporting activities included in the illustrations use information about eighteenth-century practices to distinguish the works of eye-witnesses from copies and products of the artists’ imagination. For example, familiarity with the structure and placement of wickets, knowledge of the rules of best-of-three races, and awareness of what running women actually look like provide tools for art historians seeking to establish the authenticity of sporting pictures. John Collett emerges as a reliable and well-informed creator of original images of female runners and cricketers, which were copied inaccurately by Thomas Rowlandson.

Frances Burney scholars should brace themselves for an outright denial that anything like the twenty-yard race between two enfeebled octagenarian women in Evelina (1778) was ever reported in the eighteenth century: Radford sees it as ‘a product of her fertile imagination’ (31), possibly sparked by a reference in Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Ferdinand, Count Fathom (1753) to two aristocratic gamblers running their grandmothers together, i.e. seeing which would live longer. In actuality, age presented fewer barriers to demonstrations of physical prowess: ninety-year-old Mary Wilkinson walked the 290 miles from York to London ‘in five days and three hours with “a keg of gin, and a quantity of provisions on her back”’ (125), while an eighteen-month-old girl ‘walked the length of the Mall (half a mile) in twenty-three minutes’ (90).

Precisely because this work is the result of carefully planned and scrupulously detailed research, it abounds in unexpected discoveries, sometimes appearing initially random: they are the rewards for the author’s determination to follow the evidence. Three examples must suffice. Firstly, everybody acquainted with early modern childbirth customs must have come across references to a ‘groaning cheese’, but how many know exactly what it was? Radford has unearthed a reference to a specimen weighing a hundred pounds that was the first prize for a race between ‘six heavily pregnant brewers’ wives’ who were to run a mile ‘to the top of Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh’; he then cites ‘an old English tradition in which the father of a newborn baby brought a very large, flat, round cheese for the baby’s christening’: slices would be cut from the centre, and the baby passed through the resulting hole ‘for luck’ (56). Secondly, the importance of accurate time-keeping, especially when wagers were involved, have led the author, after thorough investigation, to conclude that ‘watches were high-status, finely-crafted objects in the eighteenth century, and they recorded time very accurately; cheap and unreliable watches were still sometime in the future’ (118). More directly relevant to the book’s subject, but even more startling, is the discovery that ‘the first example of a football match played on grass, with teams of a fixed number, and played for the benefit and amusement of a crowd’ (179) was a six-a-side women’s event that took place on a bowling green in Bath, probably arranged by Beau Nash, in 1726.

There are a few minor errors in expression and presentation. In the transcription of the motto of the Amateur Athletic Assocation, taken from lines 95 and 96 of Pindar’s 9th Olympian Ode, ποδῶν and ἀκμαί have been run together when they should have space between them, and ideally […] to indicate the omission of an intervening word (115). In the useful appendix, explaining the technicalities of distance measurement, currency and gambling in early modern Britain, the author apparently makes a slip when describing the kind of wager known as a match against time: ‘In the example above, a timekeeper would stand at the finishing line and call “Time” precisely one hour after the start’ (245). Unfortunately, the hypothetical example requires the contestants to run ‘one mile (e.g. from the tavern door to the church door)’ (245) which seems far too short a distance for the time allowed, especially when we reflect that ‘a fifteen-year-old girl from Wrotham ran it in 5 minutes 28 seconds on Saturday July 11, 1795, a record unbeaten in Britain until 20 August 1932’ (119). Perhaps the chosen course should be taken into consideration: how long would the contestants stay in the tavern before they reached its door?

As well as applying extensive and meticulous scholarship to his study of human physical activity in general and sport in particular, the author deploys the practical experience acquired during an athletic career that earned him a world record, two Commonwealth gold medals and two Olympic bronze medals. He can flesh out the briefest account of an event with considerations of how it would have been organized and publicised, how the expenses would be covered, how many heats were involved, or the conditions in which it took place: for example, in 1822, when girls ran races ‘on a wet Wednesday in August’ on Gander Down, to the east of Winchester, ‘it must have been difficult for them on the wet grass, though these were chalk downs and would have drained quickly’ (205).

Professor Radford has yet more to say about the history of women’s physical achievements: on Saturday, October 7, 2023, at the opening seminar of the Women’s Studies Group 2023–24 season, at London’s Foundling Museum, he will present a paper entitled ‘Strong Women in Early Modern Europe: A Counter Narrative’. To readers of this book, this is very good news.

Carolyn D. Williams

WSG Bursary 2024 

We are delighted to announce that the 2024 WSG Bursary has been awarded to Amy Solomons. Amy is a trained archivist and librarian and  is currently a PhD researcher at the University of Liverpool and the National Trust. Her research focusses on eighteenth-century female reading experiences in historic house spaces. She will use the bursary to fund two research trips: to Mount Stuart, Isle of Bute, and Sandon Hall, Staffordshire, each of which contains bibliographic and archival sources documenting Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, her daughter, Lady Mary Countess of Bute, and her granddaughter Lady Louisa Stuart.

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Previous Bursary Winners

  • 2023: Eleanor Bird, ‘Margaret Davy, sister-in-law of Humphrey Davy and collector of his works’ (Main Award); & Brianna Robertson-Kirkland , ‘Examining three Georgian opera singers: Elizabeth Billington, Anna Selina Storace and Gertrude Mara’ (Travel Award)
  • 2020: Anna Jamieson, ‘Spending and Shopping: Women’s Experience in the Eighteenth-Century Madhouse’ and Alexis Wolf, ‘Women Nurses and Inspectors of the Foundling Hospital, 1750-1830’ (Joint award with Foundling Museum)
  • 2019: Charlotte Young, ‘Women’s involvement in Canterbury sequestrations, 1643-50’; Hannah Jeans, ‘Women’s Reading Habits and Gendered Genres, c.1600-1700’
  • 2018: Madeleine Pelling, ‘The friendship of Horace Walpole and Mary Hamilton’; Rebecca Simpson, ‘Narratives of pregnancy’
  • 2017: Charmian Mansell, ‘A new history of female service in early modern England, 1550-1650

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Summer Book Launch Event

Please join us for a special online Zoom event on Thursday 27 July, when we will be celebrating four new books by WSG members. Each author will be giving a short, informal talk about their work, followed by a Q&A session.

This event is free and open to everyone. Why not come along for some summer reading inspiration?

Reserve your place now on Eventbrite: Summer Book Launch Event – Online Tickets, Thu 27 Jul 2023 at 19:00 | Eventbrite

COME AND MEET OUR GUEST AUTHORS:

Charmian Kenner is a researcher and writer on women’s history, with a special interest in Latin America. She will discuss her free eBook Revolutionary Partners: Sarah Andrews and British campaigners for Latin American independence.

Revolutionary Partners asks: How did a young woman from Yorkshire meet a Venezuelan revolutionary in the year 1800? This is the story of Sarah Andrews and Francisco de Miranda, whose London home served as a British headquarters for the struggle to liberate Latin America from Spanish rule. Their sons Leander and Francisco took up the cause, joining many Britons who crossed the Atlantic to fight alongside Simón Bolívar or witness the dawn of a new society. All were partners in the revolution, but their contribution is little-known in Britain today, and Sarah Andrews has remained in the shadows.

Peter Radford is an Olympic medallist and world record holder, and Professor at the University of Glasgow and Brunel University. He will discuss his new monograph They Run with Surprising Swiftness: The Women Athletes of Early Modern Britain.

Sports have never been the sole preserve of men; women athletes have always been there. As this book shows, throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Britain, women of all ages ran, fought, rode, played football, cricket, tennis, and other sports. They competed in tough, head-to-head events that required extraordinary endurance and skill. They Run with Surprising Swiftness recognizes these remarkable athletes and their achievements and aims to restore them to their rightful place in the long history of women in sport.

Sara Read is a Senior Lecturer in English at Loughborough University. Her research is in the cultural representations of women, bodies and health in the early modern era.

Her second novel The Midwife’s Truth is a sequel to The Gossips’ Choice and continues the story of midwife Lucie Smith. The birth stories, which form the backdrop to the novels, are inspired by the case notes of a Bristol midwife published in 1737. The books mix humour, compassion, and sorrow, and have been scrupulously researched.

Kim Sherwood is an award-winning author and creative writing lecturer at the University of Edinburgh. Her latest novel, A Wild and True Relation (2023), was described by Dame Hilary Mantel as “a rarity – a novel as remarkable for the vigour of the storytelling as for its literary ambition. Kim Sherwood is a writer of capacity, potency and sophistication.”

The novel opens during the Great Storm of 1703, as smuggler Tom West confronts his lover Grace for betraying him to the Revenue. Leaving Grace’s cottage in flames, he takes her orphaned daughter on board ship disguised as a boy to join his crew. But Molly, or Orlando as she must call herself, will grow up to outshine all the men of his company and seek revenge – and a legacy – all of her own.

How the WSG supported my research

A reflection by Charmian Kenner

I have just published my book Revolutionary Partners: Sarah Andrews and British Campaigners for Latin American Independence, and as an independent researcher I have found the Women’s Studies Group to be a vital source of support.

I discovered Sarah Andrews, the main subject of my research, in a painting at the Venezuelan Cultural Centre in London. The picture is a contemporary re-imagining of a scene taking place in the early 1800s. Simón Bolívar, the future Liberator of Venezuela, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Panama from the Spanish, is being received by fellow revolutionary Francisco de Miranda at the latter’s London home. My attention was caught by the depiction of a young woman in the corner of the painting, reading a book with two young children next to her.

This young woman turned out to be Sarah Andrews, the British partner of Francisco de Miranda. Intrigued, I began to investigate her story and found that Sarah ran the household, which served as a London headquarters for supporters of Latin American independence. My starting point was a treasure trove of Sarah’s letters to Miranda while he was away fighting in Venezuela from 1805-1807 while she held the fort back home.

I had been a feminist historian 35 years earlier and many other things in between. Now retired, with no institutional affiliation, I needed a way to exchange ideas with like-minded people. The ideal would be a group centered on women’s history, so I searched online and was excited to find the WSG close to me in London, with seminars accessible to all.

Attending my first seminar, I was welcomed and immediately treated as an equal. Everyone I spoke to was interested in my topic and eager to help, suggesting references and recommending lines of enquiry. I was relieved to find that many in the group were independent researchers and had been able to publish their work.

The seminars were a constant source of wonder, revealing so much about centuries of women’s history. Ideas about my own research were stimulated as contributors interacted with the audience and drew out threads of commonality between the presentations. Questions and comments were always infused with a spirit of positivity. 

Some topics were of direct relevance to my research. A paper by Valentina Aparicio drew attention to Maria Graham’s journal of her stay in newly-independent Chile in 1822, which became an important source for my study. Together with documentation I had already gathered on Mary English and Kitty Cochrane, who accompanied British partners fighting alongside Simón Bolívar, this widened my focus beyond Sarah Andrews’ story. My book now includes the experiences of other British women supporters of Latin American independence.

Like everyone in the WSG, I was invited to submit a paper for the seminars. This was an opportunity to focus my thinking and develop my analysis. The response from the audience was heartening. They were keen to discover more about Sarah Andrews and her social and political context, encouraging me to continue with the research and to publish.

Feedback at the seminar provided me with key ideas from wide-ranging scholarly knowledge amongst the WSG. For example, several group members highlighted the significance of Sarah Andrews’ father being a shoemaker. This could explain how Sarah encountered revolutionary ideas in the Yorkshire market town where she was born since shoemakers’ shops were a well-documented centre for radical discussion.

Further help was forthcoming after the seminar. Louise Duckling sent suggestions for publishers, whilst Gillian Williamson shared information she found in Old Bailey records concerning a burglary at Sarah Andrews’ home in 1840. The court evidence revealed Sarah’s living arrangements and those sharing her house at this point, a period for which little other data was available.

This support validated my topic and spurred me on. I soon began to write, and at a recent WSG seminar I was happy to say that I was about to publish my book with free access online. WSG members received this announcement with the same pleasure and interest they had shown throughout my research journey. It felt like coming full circle. 

The final hurdle was to convert my Word document into the format required for an e-book. Images and captions kept repositioning themselves, and I couldn’t find anyone who knew how to solve the problem. Once again, WSG came to the rescue. I put out a call for help on the email list, and Louise Duckling quickly responded with suggestions for people experienced in formatting. The first person I contacted sent an immediate reply and not only sorted out my pictures but also improved the book’s overall design. I was ready to publish! Revolutionary Partners: Sarah Andrews and British Campaigners for Latin American Independence can be accessed free here.

Thank you, WSG!

Charmian Kenner

Charmian Kenner started life as a feminist historian in the 1970s. After many other incarnations she returned to her original occupation, having discovered the existence of Sarah Andrews, the partner of Venezuelan revolutionary Francisco de Miranda in London in the early 1800s. Sarah’s intriguing story was waiting to be told, and the result is the recently published book Revolutionary Partners: Sarah Andrews and British Campaigners for Latin American Independence, available free on Kobo.