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Ethel
Sibyl Turner (1872-1958), writer, was born on 24 January 1872 at
Doncaster Yorkshire, England, younger of two daughters of Sarah
Jane (born Shaw) and George Watnell Burwell, merchant. George Burwell
died while she was an infant and her mother married Henry Turner,
a widower with six children. The only child of the marriage, Jeannie
Rose, was born in 1876 and Sarah was widowed again before 1879,
when she emigrated with her three daughters to Sydney. On 31 December
1880 she married Charles Cope, clerk in the Department of Lands.
Their son Rex was born in 1881.
Ethel was educated at Sydney Girls' High School where she began
a literary magazine, Iris. She was determined on a literary
career and with her sister Lilian published the Parthenon
which brought her some favourable attention. She read papers to
the Literary Society and mixed with undergraduates from the University.
In April 1891 she talked to 'C' (Herbert Curlewis): 'I am going
to be his friend, it can't hurt me and it helps him he says'. She
did not marry him until 1896 when he was an established barrister
and she was already a successful writer of children's stories. Later
in 1891 when her stepfather moved the family to Lindfield she named
it the 'Sepulchre': 'It will be like being buried alive to live
in a quiet little country place after the bustle and excitement
of town life'. However she became a devotee of suburban life and
after her marriage built a home at Mosman, then a rather isolated
outer suburb.
She wrote stories, sent a 'Sydney letter' to the Tasmanian Mail
and contributed to the children's column of the Illustrated News.
The Bulletin accepted her first story in 1892 and she published
her first book Seven Little Australians in 1894. Though it
attracted some criticism, mainly for not conforming to nineteenth
century conventions for children's literature whereby 'good' in
the end was 'rewarded', the book was and long remained very successful.
Over 40 editions were published; it was translated into 10 languages,
made into a stage play in 1915, a film in 1939 and televised in
Britain in 1953 and by the Australian Broadcasting Commission in
1973 and 1975.
Ethel was as assiduous writer, producing in most years at least
one book as well as a considerable quantity of shorter pieces. She
eventually published 27 full-length novels as well as numerous collections
of short stories and anthologies of verse and fiction. In her children's
books her empathy with young characters was notable: her children
were active, able to take responsibility, competitive, at times
greedy and demanding. Often they were left to take the initiative
where a parent (especially the mother) was absent or in other ways
unsatisfactory. Embedded in her stories were the 'moral' lessons
appropriate to her time and class, but she also had the facility
to depict the give and take in family relationships.
Ethel Turner was astute in her business negotiations with publishers
securing favourable contracts. By December 1895 she had made 818
pounds 'by my pen', and had financially assisted her future husband
in securing chambers. They were married on 22 April 1896. On her
first anniversary her diary refers to 'greater happiness' and 'H.
will not mind now we have had one year alone'. Her daughter Jean
was born in 1898 and her son Adrian in l901. The marriage was very
happy; but the death of her daughter in 1930 deeply distressed Ethel.
Her last book was Judy and Punch (1928). She continued to
keep a diary until 1952, from which extracts have been published
by Phillippa Poole, her granddaughter, as The Diaries of Ethel
Turner (1978) and in Of Love and War: the Letters and Diaries
of Captain Adrian Curlewis and his Family 1939-1945 (1982).
The diaries reveal Ethel as an intelligent and affectionate parent.
They also are a valuable social record of the domestic circumstances
of a successful professional woman in early twentieth century Australia.
Ethel Curlewis died in 1958.
Heather Radi
Brenda Niall Seven Little Billabongs 1979.
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