Anne Symonds

Anne Hilda Symonds (née Harrisson; 1916–2017), was an English broadcaster on culture and politics for the BBC World Service.

Anne Hilda Symonds
Born
Anne Hilda Harrisson

(1916-08-22)22 August 1916
Liverpool, England
Died6 February 2017(2017-02-06) (aged 100)
NationalityEnglish
Alma materSomerville College, Oxford
OccupationJournalist
Spouse(s)
(m. 1940; div. 1948)
ChildrenMatthew Symonds
Parents
  • Roland Harrisson (father)
  • Hilda Grierson (mother)
RelativesTom Harrisson (cousin)
Carrie Symonds (granddaughter)

Early life

Symonds was born in Liverpool on 22 August 1916, the second child of Major Roland Harrisson, who was killed in action a year later. Her mother was Hilda Grierson.[1] On 8 October 1916, she was christened into the Church of England at Easton Grey.[2]

Some believed her to be the illegitimate daughter of Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, whom her mother had met in 1915, but she was convinced otherwise. Asquith was, however, a regular presence in her early childhood. He supported her mother financially and let her stay over in London and Sutton Courtenay. “Anne is the greatest dear,” he wrote to Hilda in 1920. Her mother moved to Boars Hill and became an accomplished artist, a friend of Stanley and Gilbert Spencer and of Paul and John Nash, as well as Robert Bridges, John Masefield and Robert Graves – who used to buy Anne sweets at the village shop.[1]

At the age of eight, Symonds was sent to the Farmhouse School, near Wendover, where students were required to do farm work. She made friends with Anne and Judith Stephen, nieces of Virginia Woolf. When she was fifteen, she moved to Oxford High School, and in 1934 she went up to Somerville College, Oxford, where she read PPE, and held office in the Oxford University Labour Club.[1] Her Oxford friends included the future MPs Denis Healey and Christopher Mayhew.

Career

Symonds's first job was working as a researcher for Lord Beaverbrook, and writing for the Evening Standard.[1] In October 1939, she was living at Sandlands, Boars Hill, with her mother and her older brother Peter Harrisson, a consultant forester.[3] Later in 1939 she travelled to America.[1]

In May 1940, she married an Oxford friend, Richard Symonds, who was sent to India with the Cripps Mission. With the Quakers, she set up a home for evacuee children in Torquay, and then worked briefly with her cousin Tom Harrisson on Mass Observation. Later, she was given a job at the Ministry of Information, working under Arthur Gore, 8th Earl of Arran. As the war in Europe ended, she was dispatched to Austria, working in Vienna and Carinthia on copy for Austrian newspapers, where she met the executioner Albert Pierrepoint.[1] In 1945, she wrote a book as “Anne Damer” with Jack Denton Scott, called Too Lively to Live.

In 1948, Symonds was divorced from her husband and applied for a job with the BBC Overseas Service, commissioning talks and making arts and other programmes. She worked on Under Big Ben and the Meet an MP spot for London Calling Europe. She was close to Hugh Gaitskell and Denis Healey.[1] In 1953, she have birth to Matthew Symonds, son of John Beavan, Baron Ardwick and co-founder of The Independent. He is the father of Carrie Symonds, the fiancée of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

After retiring from the BBC in 1976, Symonds edited APEX’s journal for Denis Howell and assisted on the quarterly Europe Left. She died on 6 February 2017, at the age of 100.[1]

References

  1. "Anne Symonds, broadcaster – obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 6 March 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  2. Register of Baptisms Solemnized in the Parish Church of Easton Grey at ancestry.com, accessed 13 November 2020: “8 Oct. 1916 Anne Hilda Harrisson daughter of Roland Damer Harrisson and Hilda Beatrice Corbett Harrisson”
  3. National Rdgistration Act 1939, Register for Boars Himl at ancestry.com accessed 13 November 2020 (subscription required)
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