Mary Ursula Bethell, usually known as Ursula Bethell was a New Zealand social worker and poet.
Background
She was born in Horsell, Surrey, England on 6 October 1874, and arrived in New Zealand with her family in 1875. Bethell was the eldest daughter of the well-to-do sheep farmer Richard Bethell and his wife Isabel Anne, née Lillie. Her father had emigrated initially in the 1860s.
Education
She was educated at Rangiora primary school, Christchurch Girls" High School, a school in Oxford and Swiss finishing schools, before returning to New Zealand in 1892 and devoting herself to charitable work.
Career
Bethell returned to Europe in 1895 to study painting in Geneva and music in Dresden. Having enough private wealth to support herself, she took up social work in London with the Anglican organization Women Workers for God, or "Grey Ladies". By 1919 she was back permanently in New Zealand, in the Cashmere Hills near Christchurch, sharing a home, Rise Cottage in Westenra Terrace, with another New Zealander returnee, Effie Pollen.
Bethell began to write poetry at the age of about fifty, but she wrote little more after the death of Effie Pollen in 1934, when she moved down into Christchurch, so that most of her output dates from the single decade of 1924–1934.
By the late 1920s, she was also writing the more deliberate and intellectually adventurous poems which took their place in her later two books"
When the New Zealand man of letters Charles Brasch visited Bethell, he found her at "the centre of an astonishingly diverse circle of interesting people, many of the younger of whom were so close to her that she almost directed their lives." These included the crime writer Ngaio Marsh, the essayist M. H. Holcroft, the artists R. H. Field and Evelyn Margaret Page, the poets Blanche Edith Baughan and J. H. East. Schroder, and the musician Frederick Joseph Page. The poet and journalist Walter Doctorate"Arcy Cresswell argued that in literary terms, "New Zealand wasn’t truly discovered.. until Ursula Bethell, "very earnestly digging", raised her head to look at the mountains."
All Bethell"s work appeared anonymously, although in old age she became less keen to remain anonymous.
She said her pseudonym, Evelyn Hayes, came from a great-great-grandfather, Sir Henry Hayes of Cork, who was "deported for life to Botany Bay for attempted abduction of a Quaker heiress."
Ursula Bethell died in Christchurch on 15 January 1945.