Mary Frances Billington

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MFB established her reputation as a journalist by holding a number of prominent posts on English newspapers and reporting on major social concerns and events, roles that were typically unavailable to women at the turn of the twentieth century. Her ethnographic study of women's lives in India, Woman in India, 1895, critiques Western preconceptions about Indian women's everyday lives and struggles. She devoted much of her later life to furthering the status of women journalists and serving in an important editorial capacity for the Daily Telegraph. Her two collections of writing published during the First World War offer some of the period's most comprehensive accounts of women's contributions to the war effort.

Milestones

6 September 1862

MFB was born in her father's parish, at Chalbury Rectory in Chalbury, Dorset, the only girl in a family of four.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.

30 November 1894

MFB published Woman in India, a collection of twenty-eight articles which had initially appeared in the Daily Graphic, the fruit of her research on the subcontinent. The title-page was dated 1895.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
6
OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.

1915

MFB published her final work, a second collection of articles on women and their role in the First World War, The Roll-Call of Serving Women: A Record of Woman's Work for Combatants and Sufferers in the Great War.
Billington, Mary Frances. The Roll-Call of Serving Women: A Record of Woman’s Work for Combatants and Sufferers in the Great War. The Religious Tract Society.

27 August 1925

MFB died at her home in London of unspecified causes at the age of sixty-three.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.

Biography

Birth and Family

6 September 1862

MFB was born in her father's parish, at Chalbury Rectory in Chalbury, Dorset, the only girl in a family of four.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.