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Two resolute women-the first female 'warco' and the trader
Two resolute women-the first female 'warco' and the trader This
special Leonaur two-in-one volume contains accounts by two
resourceful and independent women who made their way through the
often hostile bushlands of Southern Africa in the 19th Century. The
youngest daughter of the 7th Duke of Marlborough and aunt to
Winston Churchill, the future Prime Minister, Lady Sarah-Spencer
Churchill became the first female war correspondent when she was
recruited to cover the siege of Mafeking, during the Second Boer
War, for the Daily Mail. Baden-Powell and his garrison including
(Lady Sarah's husband), under constant attack by superior Boer
forces, were awaiting relief from the British Army under Roberts.
On Baden-Powell's insistence Lady Sarah had left Mafeking before it
was surrounded, but had been captured by the Boers and returned to
the town under a prisoner exchange scheme. Although untrained as a
journalist, Lady Sarah's 'matter of fact' style proved to be a huge
hit with the domestic reading audience for depicting the' carry on
under any adversity' bulldog spirit that they felt typified their
national character. From an earlier period of the Cape's troubled
colonial history, the second work in this book, relating Mrs.
Heckford's experiences, are of no less interest. Arriving in the
Cape on the eve of the Zulu War in the late 1870s, this remarkable
and resolute lady carved a life for herself in close proximity to
the potentially dangerous Kaffir tribes and the Boers who were
disaffected by British Imperial rule and by the annexation of the
Transvaal in particular. The hostilities of the First Anglo-Boer
War, notable for the British disaster at Majuba Hill in 1881, broke
out in late 1880 and Mrs. Heckford found herself besieged in
Pretoria in the midst of the uprising.
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