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Barbara
Baynton 1857 - 1929 writer
Barbara
Jane Baynton (1857-1929), writer, was born on 4 June 1857 at Scone,
New South Wales, the youngest daughter of Elizabeth (born Ewart)
and John Lawrence, carpenter. Her parents were bounty emigrants
from Londonderry, Ireland. Throughout her life she alleged she was
the daughter of Captain Robert Kilpatrick and Penelope Ewart and
she gave her age as five years younger than she was. Her claim that
her father was a landowner may have seemed more advantageous socially
than his real occupation of carpenter and, in the bohemian circles
in which she moved after 1890, her invented background was more
romantically enviable than the truth.
Between 1861 and 1866 the Lawrence family moved to Murrurundi, north
of Scone, where Barbara was presumably educated at either the national
school or the local private school. In 1880 she was employed as
a governess at 'Merrylong Park' in the Quirindi district; here she
met Alexander Frater, a selector, whom she married on 24 June 1880.
They had three children - Alexander, Robert and Penelope. After
her husband deserted the family Barbara and the children moved to
Ashfield, Sydney.
On 4 March 1890 she was granted a divorce, and on the following
day, stating she was a widow, Barbara married Thomas Baynton, a
retired surgeon. Although he was 70 years old, he had a lot to offer
a young woman with three dependent children: he gave her financial
security. He had a fine collection of antiques and Georgian silver,
and her passion for antiques dates from this period. The one son
of the marriage died in infancy.
Barbara appears to have spent some happy years with Thomas. She
had the time and the means to begin her literary career. Her first
story, 'The Tramp', was published in the Bulletin in December
1896; A. G. Stephens, the Bulletin's editor, became a close
friend. In 1902 Bush Studies was published, after many unsuccessful
attempts to find a publisher; her novel Human Toll followed
in 1907. Cobbers, containing the Bush Studies and
two new stories, appeared in 1917.
Baynton was one of Australia's most powerful short story writers,
and among the earliest, after Marcus Clarke, to achieve literary
recognition abroad. She drew most of her inspiration from her early
hard existence in the bush. Whereas Henry Lawson writes about a
harsh but lovable landscape, Baynton's stark and sometimes shocking
stories are strikingly different. They are a record of her quest
for a unifying vision of the bush; she uses recurrent imagery and
themes - the strong maternal instinct, the loyalty of a dog, the
isolation, the unreality of religion, a bitter insistence on men's
brutality to women - to lift the stories above the plane of simple
realism to something nearer the metaphysical. She penetrates the
depths of the primeval emotions of fear, loneliness and pain.
When Thomas Baynton died in 1904 she was left financially secure
and her circle of friends included many influential people. She
invested successfully in the stock exchange and at one time was
chairman of directors of the Law Book Co. She was one of a small
group of women highly critical of the society in which she lived,
as is seen in her article on 'The Indignity of Domestic Service'
and in other writing deploring conditions at Crown St Women's Hospital,
Sydney.
Baynton divided her time between Australia and London, while continuing
to add to her fine antique collection. In 1921 in London she married
Rowland George Alanson-Winn, fifth baron Headley, but the marriage
failed. Baynton's last years were spent in Melbourne, although she
returned often to London. She died on 28 May 1929 and is remembered
today for her brilliant short stories and as a women with a compelling
personality and an independent viewpoint.
Sally Krimmer
Barbara Baynton edited by Sally Krimmer and Alan Lawson 1980.
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