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  1. Helen Gladstone was born on 28 August 1849 in London to Catherine ( née Glynne) and William Ewart Gladstone, later Prime Minister. She came to notice when her sister Mary Gladstone proposed that she should become one of the first students to study at Newnham College in Cambridge. In 1877, aged 28 Helen attended Newnham College as one of 25 ...

  2. Helen Jane Gladstone (1814-80) was the youngest daughter of a wealthy Scottish merchant and the sister of the prime minister William Ewart Gladstone. She had a troubled life marked by illness, addiction, conversion to Catholicism and isolation on the Isle of Wight.

  3. www.williamgladstone.org.uk › helen-gladstoneHelen Gladstone

    Helen Gladstone (1849–1925) was the youngest child of the British prime minister William Gladstone. She studied at Newnham College, Cambridge and became a pioneer of women's education and social reform.

  4. Learn about Helen Gladstone, a pioneer of women’s education and the youngest daughter of Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone. See the house she built in 1907, now a private residence, and the sundial and crest that commemorate her.

  5. family life at Fasque, the Gladstone family estate in Scotland, Sir John's declining years. These are the years when Helen. profoundly disturbed, most heavily addicted, and when her. treatment of her was at its most extreme. The first part of the drama began to reach crisis point on the morning of 9 January 1846 when the members of the recently ...

  6. Apr 4, 2003 · The life of Helen Gladstone (1814–80), younger sister of William Ewart Gladstone, the pre‐eminent statesman of nineteenth‐century Britain, was an unhappy series of rebellions against a Victorian patriarchy that sought to manage her aberrant behaviour by grinding her into submission.

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  8. Apr 26, 2018 · Helen Gladstone’s vocation April 26, 2018 January 8, 2022 “Rather a tall person, in black” was Helen Gladstone’s typically diffident description of herself, which, according to one former student of hers, was “not at all suggestive of that vivid and compelling personality with its alert and vigorous carriage and striking distinction of features and expression”.