Background
Her father was a refrigeration engineer with a successful consulting practice.
Her father was a refrigeration engineer with a successful consulting practice.
She studied at Sydney University from 1923-1926 and it was there her friendship with Dymphna Cusack began, later to become a notable collaboration.
Born in Gisborne, New Zealand, she moved with her family to Sydney in 1920. They were both involved in debating and theatre. They shared a feminist, unionist and pacifist outlook.
Both were much later to become opponents of nuclear weapons.
He joined the Royal Australian Air Force as an Intelligence officer in 1938, and was soon promoted to Squadron Leader then Wing Commander. She had returned to Sydney in 1938 and he was in London, apparently happy to support her from a distance.
They divorced in 1948. She worked as Public Appeals Officer for The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital from 1940 to the end of 1944, when she resigned.
lieutenant was there that they collaborated on a children"s book Four Winds and a Family and Come In Spinner, which was to become the most successful book about life in wartime Sydney.
She became active in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, participating in the Aldermaston March and activities of Bertrand Russell"s Committee of One Hundred. In 1984 she edited the unexpurgated version of Come In Spinner for Richard Walsh of Angus and Robertson. She died in the Wesley Heights retirement village at Manly, where her friend and collaborator Dymphna died twelve years before.