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Richmal Crompton


 

Richmal Crompton Lamburn (November 15 1890January 11 1969) was a British writer, most famous for her Just William short stories.

Early life

She was born at Bury in Lancashire, the second child of Reverend Edward John Sewell Lamburn, a teacher at the Bury Grammer School and his wife Clara (née Crompton). Her brother, John Battersby Crompton Lamburn also became a writer, under the name John Lambourne and is remembered for his fantasy novel The Kingdom That Was (1931).

Related Topics:
Bury - Lancashire

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Crompton attended schools in Lancashire and Derbyshire, including St Elphin?s, a boarding school for daughters of the clergy in Warrington, Lancashire, and later won a scholarship to study at the Royal Holloway College in London, receiving a BA Honours degree in Classics. She also took part in the Women's Suffrage movement at the time. She returned to St Elphin?s as the Classics mistress in 1914, and later, at age 27, moved to Bromley High School in southeast London where she began her writing in earnest. Having contracted poliomyelitis, she was left without the use of her right leg in 1923. She gave up her teaching career and began to write full-time. She died in 1969 at her home in Farnborough in Kent. She was a close contemporary of Enid Blyton.

Related Topics:
Derbyshire - Warrington - Scholarship - Royal Holloway College - London - Classics - Women's Suffrage - 1914 - Poliomyelitis - 1923 - 1969 - Farnborough - Enid Blyton

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