Ursula Bloom Explained

Ursula Bloom
Birth Name:Ursula Harvey Bloom
Birth Place:Springfield, Essex, England
Death Place:Nether Wallop, Hampshire, England
Genre:Romantic fiction

Ursula Bloom (11 December 1892 – 29 October 1984) was a British novelist, biographer and journalist.

Biography

Ursula Harvey Bloom was born on 11 December 1892 in Springfield, Chelmsford, Essex, the daughter of the Reverend James Harvey Bloom, about whom she wrote a biography, Parson Extraordinary. She also wrote about her gypsy ("Diddicoy") great-grandmother, Frances Graver (born 1809), who was known as the "Rose of Norfolk", a sobriquet used by Bloom as the title of her biography. Bloom lived for a number of years in Stratford-upon-Avon, which was the subject of another book, Rosemary for Stratford-upon-Avon.[1]

She wrote her first book at the age of seven. Charles Dickens was always a dominant influence: she had read every book of his before she was ten years of age, and then re-read them in her teens. A prolific author, she wrote over 500 books, an achievement that earned her recognition in the 1975 edition of Guinness World Records.[2] Many of her novels were written under various pen names, including Sheila Burns, Mary Essex, Rachel Harvey, Deborah Mann, Lozania Prole and Sara Sloane.[3] [4] She appeared frequently on British television. Her journalistic experiences were written about in her book The Mightier Sword. Her hobbies included needlework, which she exhibited, and cooking. She was a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.[5]

Ursula Bloom married twice: firstly, in 1916, to Captain Arthur Brownlow Denham-Cookes of the 24th (Queen's) London Regiment, late of the Inner Temple (son of Colonel George Denham-Cookes of the 3rd King's Own Light Dragoons and Hon. Clara, daughter of Charles Brownlow, 2nd Baron Lurgan),[6] in the face of his family's "sniffy disapproval"; his aristocratic mother was by this time a wealthy widow, of Prince's Gate, Knightsbridge.[7] Their son, George Philip ("Pip") Jocelyn, was born in 1917 (he married in 1944, Lorna Jean Iris, daughter of Charles Lawson, of Romford, and had issue).[8] Arthur died of influenza in 1918, in the final days of the war.[9] In 1925 she married Charles Gower Robinson (d. 1979), a Royal Navy Paymaster Commander; they lived at 191, Cranmer Court, London SW3.[10] [11] [12] She died on 29 October 1984, aged 91, in a nursing home in Nether Wallop, Hampshire.[13]

Works

Notes and References

  1. The Rose of Norfolk, Ursula Bloom, Robert Hale and Company, 1964, p. 7
  2. Guinness Book of World Records vol. 13, Sterling Publishing Co., 1975, p. 208
  3. Twentieth-Century Romance and Gothic Writers, ed. James Vinson, Macmillan Publishers, 1982, p. 81
  4. Web site: Ursula Bloom (1892-1984) . www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131228100752/http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/bloom.htm . 28 December 2013 . dead.
  5. Twentieth-Century Romance and Gothic Writers, ed. James Vinson, Macmillan Publishers, 1982, p. 81
  6. Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain, and Ireland for 1903, Low, Marston & Co., 1903, p. 470
  7. Amidst Cheers, They Marched to War: Four Warwickshire Villages, One Century of Conflict, Hannah Spencer, Matador, 2018, p. 91
  8. The Aeroplane, vol. LXVII, Temple Press Ltd, 1944, p. 292
  9. Bloom, Ursula (1959), Youth at the Gate, Hutchinson, London
  10. Twentieth-Century Romance and Gothic Writers, ed. James Vinson, Macmillan Publishers, 1982, p. 81
  11. Who's Who: an annual biographical dictionary, 120th edition, A. & C. Black, 1968, p. 290
  12. Who was Who: A Companion to Who's Who, Containing the Biographies of Those who Died, vol. 8, A. & C. Black, 1981, p. 68
  13. News: Ursula Bloom Dies at 91. 31 October 1984. Newcastle Journal. 4 March 2019. 43006. 2. subscription . British Newspaper Archive.