Doris Ann Goodchild | |
Birth Date: | 11 March 1906 |
Death Date: | 19 September 1999 |
Nationality: | British |
Occupation: | Artist, author and illustrator |
Doris Ann Goodchild (11 March 1906 – 19 September 1999) was a lecturer, writer, artist, illustrator and charity fundraiser.
Doris Ann Goodchild was born on the 11 March 1906 in London to Fred and Edith Goodchild. Her parents ran the family drapery business, at 128-130 Anerley Road, south east London, where Doris was born the middle child of seven. A bright child, she won a scholarship to a local grammar school before she trained to become a teacher in 1923. She lived with her parents above the family shop until it was sold in 1936, working in various schools throughout her traineeship and early career, before taking up a teaching post in war-damaged Bristol in 1942.[1]
It was in this year that she met the woman who would become her lifetime companion, Margaret McQueen Burnett. The two shared a home together from 1956 when they lived in Bishop’s Stortford. In 1958, the pair began to prepare for their retirement, Burnett as head mistress of Walthamstow High School and Goodchild as Senior Lecturer at Hockerill Teaching Training College in Bishop's Stortford. They eventually settled on East Lothian after a holiday there, purchasing a small piece of ground to build a home in Haddington in 1965.[1]
During their retirement Goodchild and Burnett involved themselves in local charity work and travelling the country and internationally. Goodchild wrote, sketched and painted numerous details from their lives and journeys,[2] publishing her first book in 1978, an illustrated guidebook to Edinburgh's Royal Mile.
In her final years, following the death of Burnett, Goodchild sold many of her own artworks, raising money for local charities. She died suddenly at her home in Haddington in September 1999. Many of her remaining manuscripts, sketchbooks and notebooks were bequeathed to the National Library of Scotland.[3]
Goodchild was granted an MBE in the 1999 New Year Honours List for services to illustration, particularly of guide books and to the cause of education. One of her paintings, White Californian Poppies is in the collection of the Royal Scottish Academy of Art & Architecture [4]