Background
Helen Franklin (later Bentwich) was born in Notting Hill, London, into a prominent Jewish family. Her father was a merchant banker and her uncles Herbert and Stuart Samuel were leading politicians.
chairman philanthropist politician barrister
Helen Franklin (later Bentwich) was born in Notting Hill, London, into a prominent Jewish family. Her father was a merchant banker and her uncles Herbert and Stuart Samuel were leading politicians.
She attended Street Paul"s Girls" School and Bedford College (London).
Her siblings included Hugh Franklin, a suffragist, and Ellis Arthur Franklin, another banker and eventual vice-principal of the Working Men"s College. Bentwich served a forewoman at the Woolwich Arsenal in 1916. She fought for the rights of women workers and tried to form a trade union.
Forced to resign, she became an organiser for the Women"s Land Army.
She organised nursery schools, formed arts and crafts centres, and became honorary secretary of the Palestine Council of Jewish Women. She had mixed feelings about later developments in the region:
"I think of the thousands of Arabs, many of them friends of old, now leading wasted lives on the refugee camps on the other side of Jerusalem.
In the 1930s she was active in the Movement for the Care of Children from Germany, and was later involved in helping the Falashas in Ethiopia. Soon after her arrival, Helen joined the Labour Party and ran for Parliament at a by-election in Dulwich (1932) and in Harrow in the 1935 general election, but lost both times.
In 1946 she was elected for Bethnal Green North-East and from 1955 to 1965 she was a member for Stoke Newington and Hackney North.
She became chairman of the education committee in 1947, alderman in 1949, vice-chair in 1950, and Chairman of the Council from 1956-1957. In 1965 she was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
The archives of Helen Bentwich are held at The Women"s Library at the Library of the London School of Economics, ref 7HBE.
Her nephew, lawyer Benedict Birnberg, wrote that she "never acquired a handle and always cold-shouldered Zionism.".
However, in the spring of 1934 she was invited by Eveline Lowe to become a co-opted member of the London County Council education committee, and in 1937 she was elected a member of the Council for North Kensington.