Amy Violet Needham (5 June 1876, Mayfair – 8 June 1967, London),
was the author of 19 popular novels for children, a number of which, during the 1940s, were made widely available to the British public by BBC's
The Children's Hour radio programme.
Early life
Born at 9, John Street, Berkeley Square (now Chesterfield Gardens,
W1), London,
[The Junior Bookshelf, vol. 47, Marsh Hall, 1983, p. 192] Needham was the daughter of Colonel Charles Needham, of the
1st Life Guards
The 1st Regiment of Life Guards was a cavalry regiment in the British Army, part of the Household Cavalry. It was formed in 1788 by the union of the 1st Troop of Horse Guards and 1st Troop of Horse Grenadier Guards. In 1922, it was amalgamated w ...
(illegitimate son of
Francis Needham, 2nd Earl of Kilmorey
Francis Jack Needham, 2nd Earl of Kilmorey (12 December 1787 – 20 June 1880), known as Viscount Newry from 1822 to 1832, was an Anglo-Irish peer and Member of Parliament.
Biography
He was the son of General Francis Needham, 1st Earl of Kilmo ...
) and Henriette Amélie Charlotte Vincentia (known as 'Amy'), daughter of Dutch aristocrat Vincent Gildemeester Baron van
Tuyll
Tuyll is the name of a noble Dutch family, with familial and historical links to England, whose full name is Van Tuyll van Serooskerken. Several knights, members of various courts, literary figures, generals, ambassadors, statesmen and explorers ...
van Serooskerken, who had made a fortune in East Indian tin.
Charles Needham was a gambler and their finances fluctuated considerably. Violet and her sister Evelyn were educated at home, a common practice for women of their day and social standing.
Needham's early life, spent moving between houses large and small in England and on the continent, is seen as providing the basis for many of her books.
Adult life

The family spent summer holidays in Europe, and lived there for six years when Needham and her sister were young women, their father being military attaché at Rome from 1895 to 1901.
Needham and her family returned to England in 1902 when her mother bought Tylehurst,
Forest Row
Forest Row is a village and a large civil parish in the Wealden District of East Sussex, England. The village is located three miles (5 km) south-east of East Grinstead.
History
The village draws its name from its proximity to the Ashdo ...
,
East Sussex
East Sussex is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in South East England on the English Channel coast. It is bordered by Kent to the north and east, West Sussex to the west, and Surrey to the north-west. The largest settlement in East ...
, which would remain the family home for 35 years.
Still living at Tylehurst with her parents, Needham participated in the
London season
The social season, or season, refers to the traditional annual period in the spring and summer when it is customary for members of the social elite of British society to hold balls, dinner parties and charity events. Until the First World War, ...
for some years. Summers the Needhams visited family on the continent. Needham's half Dutch mother had four sisters who had variously married English, Austrian, and Dutch nationals, this last the owner of
Huys Clingendael
Clingendael is the name of a 17th-century manor house and surrounding parkland just outside The Hague, Netherlands, in the municipality of Wassenaar. Since 1982, it houses the Netherlands Institute of International Relations Clingendael.
Histo ...
, a convenient reunion locale where Needham told stories to younger cousins "Dutch, French, Austrian and English"
but gave it up in favour of gardening and home pursuits. Her sister Evelyn married in 1903 and had four sons, and Needham was a devoted aunt, telling bedtime stories which formed the basis of the 'Stormy Petrel' adventures. Her attempts at being published were turned down on the grounds that the work was too difficult for children.
Needham befriended the explorer and alpinist Douglas William Freshfield (d. 1934), a contemporary of her father but with whom she shared many interests. After Freshfield's wife's death in 1911 it has been suggested that the two would have married but for the opposition of Freshfield's family. Following the deaths of Freshfield and her father Charles in 1934 (on the day of Diamond Wedding anniversary),
and her mother Amy in 1936, Tylehurst was sold and Violet went to live in London.
Here, through a younger family member, she was able to present the manuscript of 'The Black Riders' to the publishing house
William Collins, Sons
William Collins, Sons (often referred to as Collins) was a Scottish printing and publishing company founded by a Presbyterian schoolmaster, William Collins, in Glasgow in 1819, in partnership with Charles Chalmers, the younger brother of Thom ...
. Once again, the work was decreed too difficult for children, but, following endorsement by the children of one of the Collins family directors, it was accepted for publication.
Writing
Thus Needham came to writing late in life, publishing her first book,'' The Black Riders'', in 1939, at the age of 63. In her lifetime she published 19 novels. They can be divided into three groups:
Ruritanian
Ruritania is a fictional country, originally located in central Europe as a setting for novels by Anthony Hope, such as ''The Prisoner of Zenda'' (1894). Nowadays the term connotes a quaint minor European country, or is used as a placeholder name ...
, historical, and contemporary. The eleven Ruritanian novels, sometimes known as the Empire series or the Stormy Petrel series, are set in three fictional countries in Eastern Europe: the Empire, Flavonia, and Ornowitza, the latter being a small duchy between the other two.
The Ruritanian novels fall into two groups. Some, like ''The Black Riders'' and ''The Stormy Petrel'' are set in the early twentieth century. Others, such as ''The Woods of Windri'' and ''The Changeling of Monte Lucio'' are set in an undefined mediaeval period with monasteries playing an important role.
Her first novel, ''The Black Riders'', introduces the hero Dick Fauconbois, known as the "Stormy Petrel". He lives in the Empire, although he visits Flavonia during the course of the novel. It is the story of an orphan boy who becomes a member of a secret rebel movement led by a saint-like figure called Far-Away Moses. Their chief enemy is Count Jasper, known as Jasper the Terrible, the chief of the paramilitary Black Riders. The villain Jasper is described as a darkly attractive character, whose allure is felt by the main female heroine, Wych Hazel. The novelist and poet
Michele Roberts described how her childhood reading of ''The Black Riders'' "both turned me on and made me feel guilty. Secret pleasure reading it; secret guilt."
Needham is known for writing "characters remarkable among the children's books of the period for having real moral dilemmas, and faults as well as virtues."
Bibliography
Ruritanian
*''The Black Riders'' (1939)
*''The Emerald Crown'' (1940)
*''The Stormy Petrel'' (1942)
*''The Woods of Windri'' (1944)
*''The House of the Paladin'' (1945)
*''The Changeling of Monte Lucio'' (1946)
*''The Betrayer'' (1950)
*''Richard and the Golden Horse Shoe'' (1954)
*''The Great House of Estraville'' (1955)
*''The Secret of the White Peacock'' (1956)
*''The Red Rose of Ruvina'' (1957)
Contemporary
*''The Horn of Merlyns'' (1943)
*''The Bell of the Four Evangelists'' (1947)
*''Pandora of Parrham Royal'' (1951)
*''How Many Miles to Babylon?'' (1953)
Historical
*''The Boy in Red'' (1948)
*''The Avenue'' (1952)
*''Adventures at Hampton Court'' (1954)
*''Adventures at Windsor Castle'' (1957)
Legacy
In the early 1950s, Needham left her London house to live with her widowed sister, subsequently giving up writing after a motor accident. The sisters died a day apart, Violet on the 8 June 1967 and Evelyn the next day.
In the 1940s Needham's books were broadcast on BBC's ''
The Children's Hour'', which brought her work to a wide audience in the UK. This young generation of readers included future writer's like
Auberon Waugh
Auberon Alexander Waugh (17 November 1939 – 16 January 2001) was an English journalist and novelist, and eldest son of the novelist Evelyn Waugh. He was widely known by his nickname "Bron".
After a traditional classical education at Downside ...
,
Antonia Fraser
Lady Antonia Margaret Caroline Fraser, (' Pakenham; born 27 August 1932) is a British author of history, novels, biographies and detective fiction. She is the widow of the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature, Harold Pinter (1930–2008), and ...
, Ann Swinfen and
A. S. Byatt
Dame Antonia Susan Duffy ( Drabble; born 24 August 1936), known professionally by her former marriage name as A. S. Byatt ( ), is an English critic, novelist, poet and short story writer. Her books have been widely translated, into more than t ...
,
Needham invokes a romantic "otherwhere," and makes it familiar, with a subtle, understated magical tone. As one of the "Last of the Victorians,"
Needham occupies a position as a little known mother of modern fantasy, with early preoccupations with naming, the nature of magic, and heriosm.
References
Further reading
*''The Password is Fortitude: an evaluation of some children's books by Violet Needham'' by Judith Crabb, Hermit Press, South Australia (1992)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Needham, Violet
1876 births
1967 deaths
English children's writers
20th-century English novelists
20th-century English women writers
English women novelists
People from Forest Row