Leah Leneman Explained

Leah Leonora Leneman (3 March 1944 – 26 December 1999) was a popular historian and cookery writer.[1] She wrote about Scottish history including the struggle for women's suffrage.

Biography

Leah Leneman was born in De Kalb, Illinois.[2] Her father David was an artist from Warsaw, her mother Lisa was a singer from Vienna; both had escaped anti-semitic persecution in Europe by circuitous routes. They met in New York and were making their way to California when Leah Leneman inconveniently arrived midway. She grew up in Hollywood, Los Angeles where David painted and ran several art studios, in a cosmopolitan multilingual household full of his artwork and beautifully painted furniture. Leneman was educated at Bnai Reuben first school, Bancroft Junior High then Hollywood High School, where she launched into acting. She hung around the studio gates with her camera and compiled a large album of personal snaps of the stars. Her acting career in the early 1960s took her to HB Studio in Greenwich Village, New York under William Hickey, then to the Tower Theatre in Islington, London.[3]

In London as a foreigner and as her acting career faltered, Leneman could only take jobs for which no British worker was available. Fortunately the city in the 1960s had labour shortages, plus a Jewish diaspora whose businessmen would vouch for her indispensability. Her low point was as an usherette at the Odeon, Leicester Square, but then she was hired as a reservation clerk at BOAC the forerunner to British Airways. This entitled her to inexpensive travel and she began to tour the world. By 1970 she was determined to live permanently in Britain and applied for citizenship: the police saw her passport full of stamps from India, Burma, Japan and beyond and were anxious to know if she was a communist. Thus Leneman became British, and was required to give up her US citizenship.

Influenced by the Vedanta movement of Hinduism, in 1963 Leneman became vegetarian and by 1970 a vegan. From her many travels she often contributed to The Vegetarian, the magazine of the Vegetarian Society UK, who offered her a job as assistant editor at their base in Altrincham. Her travels also piqued her interest in history and she began to study it seriously.

In 1974 at her Altrincham flat, her dressing gown ignited from an unguarded gas fire, inflicting third degree burns to her lower body, and second-degree burns to her back. She spent three months lying on her belly in the Burns Unit at Wythenshawe Hospital.

Leneman recovered by 1975 and passed enough A-levels to enroll that year, aged 31, as a student of history at the University of Edinburgh. She settled permanently in the city, and insofar as ethnicity is self-defined, this marks her transition to being Scottish. She also won her first contract for a cookery book based on her recipes, Slimming the Vegetarian Way, and this was to be a life-long career strand. [4] It was in tune with broader trends bringing vegetarianism to the mainstream, boosted by the popularity of cuisines such as Chinese which were less reliant on meat or dairy produce, and with their ingredients becoming more widely available, first in wholefood shops then the supermarkets.

Her Ph.D. thesis became her first history book, Living in Atholl, based on the archives at Blair Atholl castle, which documented a society transitional between highland and lowland ways of life against the backdrop of the Jacobite rebellions. (The multilingual Leneman learned Gaelic in order to better read her sources.) This led to a productive collaboration with Rowy Mitchison in the Department of Economic and Social History at Edinburgh. 17th and 18th century Presbyterian churches pried into their parishioners' sex lives and called them to account, while Scots lawyers argued over which relationships were marriages "by habit and repute" (entailing property rights and legitimate children) and which were fornication. Girls in Trouble and Sin in the City brought these aspects of social history and women's history in Scotland to a wide audience. Divorce, separation from cruelty, and re-marriage were available to Scots of modest means in an era when it was exceptional in England and Ireland.

In 1990 the National Museum of Scotland commissioned a series of mini-biographies, Scots Lives, and Leneman wrote the first, on Elsie Inglis. This expanded into In the Service of Life a full-length account of Inglis' remarkable career during the Great War, raising a series of mobile battlefront hospitals staffed entirely by women, conducting advanced surgery and enduring multiple adventures and privations across wartime Europe. Many of those volunteers were from a suffrage background or were politicised by their experience, and in A Guid Cause Leneman went on to document women's struggle for the vote in Scotland.

Leneman never held a tenured academic position, preferring to live from short-term grant to grant. From 1976 her partner was Graham Sutton (born 1950), a public health doctor, who shared her aversion to marriage and children. In 1991 she developed breast cancer but remained symptom-free until 1997, travelling, publishing and learning scuba-diving. She then became seriously ill, only to enjoy a puzzling two-year remission and resume life and work. Her health again declined in late 1999 and she died at home in Edinburgh. She was survived by her partner and by her sister Helen Leneman (born 1945), a Cantor and notable Bible scholar.

Legacy

The Leah Leneman Prize is awarded every two years to writers in Scotland for an essay on women's or gender history.

Publications

Food & cookery:

History:

Other:

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women; from the earliest times to 2004. 2006. Edinburgh University Press. Ewan, Elizabeth; Innes, Sue & Reynolds, Sian. 9780748626601. Edinburgh. 367680960.
  2. Leah Leneman obituary . 28 Dec 1999. The Scotsman . 12.
  3. Leneman. Leah. A Personal History . 2000. Women's History Review . 9. 3. 453-481.
  4. Web site: Vegan Views 34 - Interview with Leah Leneman. www.veganviews.org.uk. 2018-11-30.
  5. Leneman. Leah. June 1997. The awakened instinct: vegetarianism and the women's suffrage movement in Britain. Women's History Review. 6. 2. 271–287. 10.1080/09612029700200144. 144004487 . 0961-2025. free.