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Emily Hobhouse, 1860-1926, was one of the first great women of
the twentieth century. She was a feminist, a pacifist and an
internationalist, and above all a humanitarian. She worked
tirelessly for the disadvantaged and, in the case of the South
African women and children who were herded into concentration camps
by Lord Kitchener, was relentless in expounding their cause. This
took great courage. She was deported from Cape Town, and was unable
to get legal redress. Emily Hobhouse's young life was spent in a
tiny village in east Cornwall where her father was Rector and it
was only when he died that she was able to expand her horizons. She
was 35 and untrained. She went to Minnesota, USA, to do welfare
work for Cornish miners and formed an unfortunate relationship with
a man who became Mayor of the town. They planned to marry and live
in Mexico. Emily spent a trying time until the engagement was
broken off just before the Boer War started. After the war she
travelled through the ravaged areas of South Africa and devised a
successful scheme of home industries for young girls on isolated
farms. Illness forced her to seek refuge in Italy where she
remained almost to the beginning of World War I, and began her
famous corre-spondence first with J.C. Smuts and then with Isabel
Steyn. Her comments on the events of the day show unusual
foresight. She was loved by the people of South Africa and admired
by those like Mahatma Gandhi who asked for her help. She was a bit
of a painter, a writer and an entertainer, and in spite of
ill-health travelled easily between countries, even in the midst of
the first World War when she went to Germany, and hoped to obtain
peace. Returning to Europe after that war Emily Hobhouse put into a
place a number of schemes to help the impoverished, but the cry of
the children of Leipzig won her particular sympathy, and with the
help of the Save the Children Fund and later the South Africans she
devised a feeding scheme for them. The South Africans so admired
her that they clubbed together to buy her a little house in
Cornwall, at St. Ives. Later Emily moved to London where she died,
8th June 1926. Her remains were cremated and the ashes buried at
the foot of the memorial for the women and children who died in the
Anglo Boer War for whom she had worked so hard. This book contains
an outline of Emily Hobhouse's life and work including much new
material; official and un-official records of the Concentration
Camps set up by Lord Kitchener in the Anglo Boer War; many letters,
and correspondence with J.C. Smuts and Isabel Steyn, wife of the
ex-President of the Orange Free State.
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