Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Today I want to tell you about a powerful and remarkable Irish woman of the sixteenth century.


Today I want to tell you about a powerful and remarkable Irish woman of the sixteenth century.


 Her name was Gráinne Ní Mháille, but is often known today as Grace O’Malley or Granuaile, and she became one of the most famous seafaring figures.

Gráinne was born around 1530 in western Ireland during the reign of Henry VIII. She belonged to the powerful Ó Máille clan of County Mayo. They were a family whose lives were tied to the sea. Their lands stretched along the coastline of Clew Bay and they were protected by castles and defended by ships.

Legend says that when she was a young girl she wished to sail with her father on a trading voyage to Spain but she was told that her long hair would become tangled in the ship’s ropes. But she refused to accept that and she supposedly cut off her hair. Whether that is true or not, the story gives us a glimpse of the spirit that she became known to have. The nickname Granuaile is often connected to this tale and has been translated as “Gráinne the Bald” or “cropped-haired Gráinne.”

Life in sixteenth-century Ireland was changing at some pace. The Gaelic clans still ruled much of the countryside, but English influence was growing and the traditional way of life was increasingly being threatened.

Around 1546 she married Dónal an Chogaidh Ó Flaithbheartaigh, a powerful lord of Connacht. Their marriage strengthened political alliances and also brought more wealth and influence. They had three children: Owen, Maeve, and Murrough.

When Dónal was killed in 1565 during conflict in Connacht, Gráinne was faced with being a widow in a dangerous time, when women rarely held any obvious power. She decided to return to her own lands and she took command. She established herself at Clare Island and maintained control of her ships, followers, and territories. Stories began to grow about her courage and her determination. The stories even included tales of her inflicting revenge on enemies who had threatened people close to her. Whether every detail of the stories about her are accurate or not, her reputation as a formidable leader was spreading far and wide.

Gráinne later became known as the “Pirate Queen,” although the title can be misleading. Along the western Irish coast, clan leaders often controlled sea routes, they collected payments from passing vessels, and carried out raids against rivals. English officials frequently saw this as piracy, but Gráinne and her followers would likely have seen them as part of protecting their territory, power, and even survival.

She remarried Richard “Iron” Bourke, another influential lord, and they had a son named Tibbott. Even in her marriage, Gráinne maintained an unusual amount of independence. She remained active by land and sea, she protected her interests and she even commanded vessels along the western coast.

As English authority was beginning to tighten across Ireland under Elizabeth I, Gráinne’s position became increasingly difficult. Sir Richard Bingham, who was the English governor of Connacht, clashed with her and her family. Her sons and relatives were imprisoned, her lands were threatened, and her authority was challenged. She had spent decades defending her people and way of life only to see English power steadily closing in.

In 1593, Gráinne undertook perhaps the most extraordinary journey of her life. She travelled to England. She petitioned Queen Elizabeth I directly for the release of her family and the protection of her interests. Can you imagine, two powerful women from very different worlds meeting at Greenwich Palace. Later legend embellished the meeting, but it was real. Gráinne argued her case successfully enough that Elizabeth issued orders that were intended to help her and her relatives.

Unfortunately, the conflict continued and Gráinne spent her final years trying to navigate political insecurity and war during the Nine Years’ War. It is believed she most likely died around 1603, the same year that Elizabeth I died.

 Gráinne Ní Mháille is remembered not just as the “Pirate Queen” but as a determined leader and woman who challenged expectations.

Do you think Gráinne O’Malley was a rebel or a leader or was she both?

She is such an interesting woman and I really want to dig deeper and learn more about her.

Image info:
Grace O’Malley and Queen Elizabeth I

Pregnancy and Childbirth on Britain’s Home Front of World War Two.

Pregnancy and Childbirth on Britain’s Home Front of World War Two.

As you know we have recently been finding out more about life on the Home Front during the Second World War. Today I want to look at pregnancy and childbirth during wartime. A topic very rarely discussed.
When war began in 1939, many women were already expecting children while countless others soon discovered that they were pregnant just as their husbands were leaving for service. Pregnancy during wartime was full of joy and hope, just like today, but there must have also been fear.
Some women had to face the prospect of giving birth while they were separated from their husbands. They also did not know when or even if they would see them again.
During the early years of the war, life was changing fast. Air raids, blackouts, rationing and evacuations were an all too present part of life. Expectant mothers still needed care, but hospitals and doctors were obviously under enormous pressure. Antenatal clinics became increasingly important. Clinics must have provided reassurance especially during these anxious times.
The threat of bombing would have added an additional layer of worry. In cities that were affected badly by air raids, heavily pregnant women would have had to often rush to shelters in the middle of the night, carrying blankets and belongings all while trying to protect themselves and their unborn child. Some babies were even born during raids or shortly afterwards, with the mothers and the midwives working under extraordinary conditions. The explosions must have been terrifying.

Pregnant women from heavily bombed areas were sometimes encouraged to move to safer parts of the countryside. The distance from home must have made the experience of pregnancy even more isolating. They would have found themselves among strangers, away from everything familiar to them and often away from their families support.

Rationing was a challenge to everyone but for pregnant women trying to grow a healthy baby it must have been worrying. Although the government did recognise the importance of health for expecting women and did offer extra food allowances for them and young children, shortages would still have affected meals. Many mothers worked hard to ensure that their babies would be healthy in spite of the restrictions.

For some women, wartime pregnancy brought not only anxiety but also judgement. Relationships with servicemen, including American GIs and other Allied troops stationed in Britain, sometimes led to pregnancies that were unexpected or unwanted. Wartime romances developed quickly at a time when fear and the loss of life seemed constant. The realities afterwards though, could be complicated. If a young man was posted abroad, killed, or returned home before a marriage could take place, the woman might be left to face a pregnancy alone. At a time when pregnancy out of wedlock carried strong stigma, single mothers could experience shame, be the subject of gossip or pressure from family and society. A few couples that had hoped to marry were separated by military duty, distance, or even official delays. Despite all of this many women showed remarkable resilience, they raised their children with determination while being forced to navigate a society that was not always understanding or supportive.

Childbirth itself was also far more dangerous than many people realise today. Pain relief and medical care was improving, but birth still carried real risks and pain. Midwives played an essential role.

Wartime births usually took place in the home, particularly during the earlier years of the war, although increasing numbers of mothers were encouraged or evacuated to maternity hospitals or nursing homes if facilities were available. When labour started, a midwife was usually called. A family member, neighbour, or friend would usually fetch them.

Fathers were very rarely present at the birth, childbirth was still very much considered a female space and obviously many husbands were away serving. Instead, women were usually supported by midwives, district nurses, female relatives, neighbours, or close friends. Some births were calm, but others were overshadowed by air raids.

If a woman was in labour and an air raid happened, moving her was not always possible or safe so many remained where they were.

If labour began while a woman was already in an air raid shelter, the midwife or doctor would be sent for if possible, and she would often remain there rather than risk travelling during the raid. Some larger public shelters and Underground stations had first-aid posts or medical staff, and babies were occasionally born in these cramped and noisy conditions. Privacy was very limited, but often help was offered by other people sheltering, they offered blankets and reassurance.

Midwives and medical staff continued their work despite the danger.

Do you think childbirth during wartime may have strengthened people’s determination to endure?

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

The Truth About Tudor Food: Myths, Misconceptions, and Everyday Reality


The Truth About Tudor Food: Myths, Misconceptions, and Everyday Reality

Today I going to look at Tudor food and some of the stories that surround it. Tudor meals are often thought of as strange, unpleasant, or even dangerous, but many popular beliefs are not entirely true.


When the Tudor period began in 1485, food was often connected to wealth, status, and to the seasons. One of the biggest myths is that Tudor people ate rotten meat disguised with spices. This seems to appear quite often in films and popular history, but spices were extremely expensive imports. They were symbols of wealth and prestige, not something that would have been casually wasted in order to hide spoiled food. Eating rotten meat could make people seriously ill, and most households understood that. Wealthy families could afford fresh meat. Poorer people had to make their limited supplies last by salting, smoking, or drying them.

Another myth is that everyone ate enormous feasts, just like the ones given by Henry VIII. It is true that the royal court could be extravagant, they served multiple dishes and rich foods placed on long tables, but it would not have been like this for most people. Ordinary Tudor families lived very differently. Bread, pottage, cheese, seasonal vegetables, and small amounts of meat or fish formed the basis of many of their meals. For poorer households, food was often simple and it would have depended heavily on what was grown locally or purchased cheaply.

We also often hear that vegetables were disliked or avoided. This is misleading. Many Tudor people regularly ate peas, beans, onions, cabbages, leeks, and herbs. What differed was social attitude. Some wealthy people did view certain vegetables as common. They preferred to eat meat in order to demonstrate their higher status. But for many families, vegetables were essential and thankfully nutritious.

Another myth suggests that Tudor people constantly drank ale because water was unsafe everywhere. While ale was certainly common and sometimes safer to drink in many crowded towns, water was not universally dangerous. Many communities used wells, springs, and rivers, obviously the quality varied depending on the location and the sanitation.

Finally, there is the belief that Tudor food was bland and unpleasant. In truth, Tudor cooks often used strong flavours. Sweet and savoury ingredients appeared together, and spices, herbs, fruits, and sauces created meals that may seem unusual to our more modern palettes, but they were carefully prepared and appreciated.

What food you ate in Tudor England was influenced by amongst other things your class, your religion and your location. These were just real people trying to feed families, display status, or just make it through another season.

 

Loneliness and Friendship in Wartime Britain: Finding Comfort During the Darkest Days

Loneliness and Friendship in Wartime Britain: Finding Comfort During the Darkest Days
We recently found out about Nella Last and Mass Observation, particularly in World War Two. Today I want to find out a little a bit more and look at something that influenced wartime Britain just as much as the rationing or the air raids. That is the loneliness and friendships of the war.
When Britain declared war in 1939, daily life changed almost overnight. Men started to leave for military service, some children were evacuated, and families were quite often separated and with very little warning. Streets suddenly became quieter or sometimes filled with strangers.

 For many people, and especially for women, older people, and for evacuees, the war brought with it a deep sense of unease and loneliness.
Mass Observation, including the words of people like Nella Last, allow us to take a glimpse into these emotions. Their diaries show us that wartime was not just about patriotism and endurance. It was also about the private fears and the struggles to feel connected.
During the early months of the war, loneliness may well have been overwhelming. Mothers watched their children leave for the countryside or marched to war, sometimes not knowing when or if they would see them again. Wives and sweethearts were suddenly facing long absences and they worried constantly about their loved ones serving abroad. Older people whose families had moved or enlisted could find themselves suddenly sitting alone in homes that all of a sudden felt much emptier than before. Letters became treasured possessions, they were often read repeatedly because they gave some comfort and reassurance.
But war also influenced new forms of friendship.

As the bombing intensified during the Blitz from 1940 onwards, people were drawn together. There was a shared experience and a feeling of pulling together for most people. Neighbours who had barely spoken before the war, were suddenly sheltering together during air raids. They exchanged news, and helped clear damage afterwards. Tea, conversations, and simple acts of kindness became huge comforts. Some friendships that formed in shelters and queues lasted for decades after the war ended.

Women especially found companionship through wartime organisations and voluntary work. Groups like the Women’s Voluntary Service, factory workforces, nursing units, and the Women’s Land Army brought people together from very different backgrounds. Friendships could ease the fear and exhaustion that many struggled with and they offered emotional support during difficult days.

Nella Last’s diary shows this transformation particularly well. At first she often felt isolated and restricted, but voluntary work gradually expanded her world and it introduced her to friendships that gave her confidence and purpose.
In 1945, Britain celebrated its victory, but many people still had those complicated feelings. Joy was being felt alongside grief, and some of the friendships that came about from the hardships that people faced faded as ordinary life started to return.

Do you think the friendships formed during wartime were stronger because people faced hardship together?

Monday, 1 June 2026

When a Penny Meant Dinner: Hungry Victorian Schoolchildren and School Meals

When a Penny Meant Dinner: Hungry Victorian Schoolchildren and School Meals

Today I want to tell you about the penny dinner. We usually think of Victorian schools as having strict discipline, severe teachers and crowded classrooms and for the most part that is true, but we don’t usually think about the hunger.

During the early Victorian period, poverty was a reality for countless families. Many parents worked for long hours in factories, workshops, or domestic service, and wages were often uncertain. Children themselves frequently needed to work to help support the household. Families struggled to stretch what little money they had.

By the middle of the nineteenth century, education was becoming more important. Reformers believed that schooling could improve society, but they soon realised that learning was difficult when children were hungry. Some teachers noticed some pupils arriving to school weak, distracted, or too tired to concentrate. This of course also affected attendance, and so did health.

This concern helped to influence the growth of penny dinners during the later Victorian years. These were simple, low-cost meals provided for poor schoolchildren, usually for the price of a penny or sometimes funded partly by charities and local supporters. The meals were not luxurious. A child might receive a small bowl of soup, bread, stew, rice pudding, or other plain but filling foods. That meal may have felt like an enormous comfort.

The idea spread through charitable groups, school boards, and social reformers, particularly in the fast growing cities where poverty was more difficult to ignore. Penny dinners are a reflection of the changing attitude toward childhood. People were beginning to believe that children deserved to have care and protection.

Of course, not everyone agreed. Some Victorians were worried that feeding children at school would encourage dependency or even weaken parental responsibility. Others argued that no child should be expected to learn while they were hungry. This shows just how much Victorian society struggled with the ideas of charity, duty, and personal responsibility, and today similar arguments are still being had.

 

Do you think that Victorian society had a responsibility to feed children?

 

 


Image info:

Brook Street, Ragged and Industrial School

Date: 1853

 

 

The Land Girl Called John: The Remarkable Story of Enid Barraud

The Land Girl Called John: The Remarkable Story of Enid Barraud

We recently learned about the Women’s Land Army and the remarkable work these women did for the war effort. Today I want to tell you about Enid Mary Barraud, although many of her friends knew her as “John.”

She was born on the 7th of February 1904. She was educated at St Bernard’s High School in Essex, later passing the University of London matriculation examination in 1922. For around fifteen years before the war, she worked in London as an insurance clerk. She described herself as “mentally male, physically female” and preferred the name John among friends. She also shared a relationship with her partner, Dorothea “Bunty” Haines, at a time when relationships like theirs were misunderstood or hidden.

When the war broke out in September 1939, Enid joined the Women’s Land Army almost immediately. She was one of its earliest recruits. She moved into the countryside around Little Eversden in Cambridgeshire, where she had recently bought a cottage. For someone leaving city office work, the adjustment to farm life must have been enormous. The work was physically exhausting and often muddy and cold, but Enid seemed to embrace it.

Her experiences on the land inspired her to write. Between 1941 and 1945 she contributed articles to newspapers and magazines. She shared her honest accounts of rural life and the realities of wartime farming. Her words were authentic because they came directly from her lived experience. She also wrote poetry and later collected many of her observations into books, including Set My Hand Upon the Plough after the war.
Not everything was easy. After several years on one farm, she was dismissed as unsuitable. It must have felt unfair, especially as wartime labour priorities had shifted. Rheumatism forced her to leave the Women’s Land Army in 1944, and she criticised the limited support available to workers that were leaving.

 She went on to work in publishing before joining zoological research at the University of Cambridge, where she contributed to scientific studies and continued her writing.

Enid Barraud died on the 26th of July 1972, aged 68.

Do you think stories like Enid Barraud’s help us understand the home front in a more personal way?

Sunday, 31 May 2026

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron

Today, I want to tell you about Beatrice Cameron.

Beatrice Cameron was born Susan Hegeman in 1868 in Troy, New York. At the time acting was not always viewed as a respectable profession for women so stepping onto the stage required both courage and a certain amount of determination.

Her theatrical career began almost by chance. She was attending a rehearsal for The Midnight Marriage at New York’s Madison Square Theatre, a performer in a small role became ill and Susan volunteered to take the part. By the following evening she had learned not only the lines but also the dance routines. The experience opened the door to a new life.
After working briefly with actor Robert Mantell, she joined the company of the celebrated actor Richard Mansfield in 1886 and adopted the stage name Beatrice Cameron. Her first role with Mansfield’s troupe was in Prince Karl, but she soon gained wider attention. In 1887 she played Agnes Carew in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a role she performed in America and in London. She travelled and performed in major productions.

In 1889 she became the first actress to portray Nora on Broadway in Henrik Ibsen’s controversial play A Doll’s House. The role explored independence and the expectations placed on women, and it makes me think whether it spoke to her personally.

In 1892 she married Richard Mansfield, and the two continued touring together. In February 1895, while travelling to Milwaukee, Beatrice and her maid were injured when a passenger coach crashed into their private railway carriage.

 Thankfully their injuries were only minor.
Their son, George Gibbs Mansfield, was born on the 8th of August 1898, and shortly before this Beatrice had retired from acting. Maybe motherhood and family pulled her away. Sadly Richard died in 1907, and during the First World War she lost their son to meningitis while training with the Signal Corps in 1918. The loss must have been devastating.

Beatrice turned toward helping others. In 1920 she travelled abroad to aid victims of the Armenian genocide, working with the refugees and orphans in places including Urfa and Jerusalem. Through the suffering and uncertainty, she reportedly recited Shakespeare in an attempt to comfort those in need. She also supported relief efforts elsewhere, backed the women’s suffrage, and became active in civic causes.

Beatrice also preserved her husband’s theatrical legacy, she donated costumes and organised productions in his memory. She remained in New London, Connecticut until her death from coronary thrombosis on the 12th of July 1940, aged 72.

Today I want to tell you about a powerful and remarkable Irish woman of the sixteenth century.

Today I want to tell you about a powerful and remarkable Irish woman of the sixteenth century.  Her name was Gráinne Ní Mháille, but is o...