Metadata: Bentwich, Helen (1892-1972)
Collection
- Country:
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- Holding institution:
- The Women's Library
- Holding institution (official language):
- The Women's Library
- Postal address:
- 10 Portugal Street London Greater London United Kingdom WC2A 2HD
- Phone number:
- Telephone: +44 (0)20 7405 7686
- Reference number:
- 7HBE
- Title:
- Bentwich, Helen (1892-1972)
- Title (official language):
- Bentwich, Helen (1892-1972)
- Creator/accumulator:
- Bentwich, Helen Caroline, 1892-1972, social worker and writer
- Date(s):
- 1910/1960
- Language:
- English
- Extent:
- 7 A boxes, 1 OS box and 4 OS items
- Scope and content:
- The archive consists of correspondence, notebooks and diaries, press cuttings, photographs and other papers. The papers include diaries of Helen's youthful travels in Bosnia and Dalmatia with her family and also some documents pertaining to her later political career. The majority of the collection, however, consists of correspondence: over 2,000 individual letters, spanning the period from around 1914 until the 1960s and documenting many aspects of Helen's life and career. Letters written to Helen's mother from Cairo during the First World War illuminate the British community in the Middle East and the history of Palestine during the conflict. Letters written to Norman give insights into the land army, work at Woolwich Arsenal and trade union activity and also contain information about her brother Hugh Franklin and his suffrage activities at this date. The long and detailed letters to Helen's mother from Jerusalem, 1919-1932 document the history of the British Mandate as well as the evolution of Helen's personal attitude towards Palestine, Jerusalem and the Jewish nation itself. There are frequent references to the political situation and to figures such as Balfour and Herbert Samuel, along with personal observations about every-day life.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- Helen Caroline Bentwich née Franklin (1892-1972) was the daughter of Arthur Ellis Franklin (1857-1938), senior partner in the banking house of A Keyser and Co, leader of the New West End Synagogue, and brother-in-law of the Liberal cabinet minister, Herbert Samuel, and Caroline Franklin née Jacob. Helen's brother was the suffrage campaigner, Hugh Franklin (1889-1962); her niece was the scientist Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958). Helen trained in social work at Bedford College and ran a Girl Guide unit in the East End and a Jewish Girls' Club in Soho, London. During a visit to Egypt with her parents in 1910 she met her future husband, Norman de Mattos Bentwich (1883-1971). Norman, who had been educated at Cambridge and called to the bar in 1908, worked for the Egyptian Ministry of Justice until the outbreak of war in 1914 when he joined the British Army in Egypt and took part in the conquest of Jerusalem. The couple married in 1915. During the First World War Helen undertook a variety of work: in a hospital; at Woolwich Arsenal - from which she was dismissed for her trade union activity; and as an organiser of the Land Girls. In 1918 Norman became legal secretary to the British military administration in Palestine and, after the establishment of the Mandate in 1922, the country's first Attorney-General. Helen lived with him in Jerusalem until 1929 when his position, as an official and a Jew, became increasingly difficult; they returned to London, and Norman retired from the Colonial service in 1931. He became Professor of International Relations at the Hebrew University in 1932 and was active in many spheres, including serving as director of the League of Nations high commission for refugees from Germany (1933-1935). He also served in the Ministry of Information during World War II and was involved in the National Peace Council (1944-1946). In the inter-war and post-war years Helen was active in Labour politics and stood for Parliament, although she was never elected. However, she was prominent on the London County Council (LCC), of which she became chair in 1956. Helen died in 1972.
- Access points: locations:
- Cairo
- Great Britain
- Jerusalem
- Access points: persons/families:
- Bentwich, Helen
- Franklin, Hugh A
- Subject terms:
- Correspondence
- Diaries
- Mandatory Palestine
- Personal records
- World War I
- Access, restrictions:
- This collection is available for research. Readers are advised to contact The Women's Library in advance of their first visit. [Please note, the photograph album is currently unavailable as it is being catalogued in detail - Mar 2009].
- Finding aids:
- Online catalogue see https://archives.lse.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=7HBE
- Yerusha Network member:
- AIM25
- Author of the description:
- Catalogue by Dr Anne Summers, The Women's Library Mar 2009. Edited for AIM25 by Sarah Drewery.
- Women's Library