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And of all the places, many stories we could tell

Rebecca Clarke SpeakerNet Sponsor


Region:
Anywhere
Notice Period:
Emergency (maybe less than one week's notice)
Type:
author
Fee:
Unknown: £30+ I am happy to negotiate a fee with the group dependant on the finances of the group
Category:
History
Updated:
9th June 2026

The Clarke sisters were enthusiastic letter writers and diary writers. This talk covers the travel diaries and postcards written by sisters Edith, Queenie and Winnie from 1898 to 1910 and covers holidays taken in Worthing, Gorleston, the Cairngorms and Paris amongst other places. Divided in to sub-categories like 'We went in the motor', 'We all five sallied bravely forth', 'We went on the beach and bathed' and 'Then we had tea', this talk introduces the audience to real experiences of these young women in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras. The talk includes readings from the diaries and is complemented by photographs from the family archives.

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About Rebecca Clarke

I was born in country Australia in 1972 and grew up in and around Melbourne. I completed secondary school teacher training at the University of Melbourne and taught in Melbourne schools before marrying and starting a family. My husband’s job has led to many opportunities for travel, as a couple and then as a family, and we have had three secondments to London as well as spending time in York, Madrid and Brussels. Since 2013 we have lived in West London where I have home educated our kids, written a book and volunteered with the National Trust as well as helping to run choirs and being a trustee for a youth music education service. My teacher training was centred around the subjects of English, Music and Drama but I have always had an interest in history and in family history. My primary inspiration for writing has been the archival material and life stories of my husband’s great aunts. Edith, Winifred and Anne Clarke were intelligent, focused, determined women who also kept everything! Fortunately for me, their hoarding has meant that there is family archival material going back almost two hundred years. There are deeds and diaries, books and cards, letters and newspaper cuttings, photos, drawings, furniture, clothing and all of it means that there are so many stories to discover and so many stories to be told. It is wonderful raw material and it will keep me busy for many, many years to come.


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