Elizabeth Longford
Elizabeth Pakenham, Countess of Longford, better known as Elizabeth Longford, was an English historian. She was a member of the Royal Society of Literature and was on the board of trustees of the National Portrait Gallery in London. She is best known as a historian, especially for her biographies of 19th-century figures including Queen Victoria, Lord Byron and the Duke of Wellington.
Early life
Elizabeth Harman was born on 30 August 1906 at 108 Harley Street in Marylebone, London. The daughter of eye specialist Nathaniel Bishop Harman, she was educated at Francis Holland School and Headington School, and was an undergraduate at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. "Able, articulate and beautiful", in the words of The New York Times, she was "the Zuleika Dobson of her day, with undergraduates and even dons tumbling over one another to fall in love with her". A few years after her graduation, on 3 November 1931, she married Frank Pakenham, later 7th Earl of Longford, who died in August 2001. Her obituary by the BBC said the marriage was "famously harmonious". The New York Times, in its review of The Pebbled Shore, called Lady Longford "easily the best writer in what is predominantly a literary family".She and her husband were both devout Roman Catholic converts, Lady Longford having been raised a Unitarian, and avid social reformers. The Longfords had eight children:
- Lady Antonia Margaret Caroline Pakenham
- Thomas Francis Dermot Pakenham, 8th Earl of Longford
- The Honourable Patrick Maurice Pakenham
- Lady Judith Elizabeth Pakenham
- Lady Rachel Mary Pakenham
- The Honourable Michael Aidan Pakenham
- Lady Catherine Rose Pakenham
- The Honourable John Toussaint Pakenham
Political career
She made several unsuccessful attempts to win election to the House of Commons as a Labour MP. In 1935 she contested Cheltenham, which was a safely Conservative seat, and in 1950 she was defeated by Quintin Hogg at Oxford. Through the war she had sought selection at Birmingham King's Norton until she felt compelled to cease her candidacy upon her sixth pregnancy in 1944; the seat was a Labour gain in 1945 by 12,000 votes.Death
Longford died on 23 October 2002, aged 96, at Bernhurst in Hurst Green, East Sussex.Publications
- Victoria R.I. Awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize
- Wellington: The Years of the Sword and Wellington: Pillar Of State, a two-volume biography of the first Duke of Wellington, who numbered among her husband's relatives
- The Royal House of Windsor
- Winston Churchill
- Byron
- A Pilgrimage of Passion: The Life of Wilfrid Scawen Blunt
- Jameson's Raid
- Elizabeth R: A Biography