Alison Settle

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Alison Settle
Vogue from 1926 to 1935, and belonged to government bodies tasked with improving British design and taste. Alison Settle's archive is located at the University of Brighton Design Archives.[2]

Personal life

She was the second child of Margaret (Maggie) Campbell Munro and Georg Friedrich Gotthilf Fuchs, Premier Lieutenant of the Landwehr and descendant of the Central European aristocratic family Monod de Froideville. Her older brother was the zoologist Harold Munro Fox. Settle intended to read History at the University of Oxford, and won a bursary to Somerville College, but was unable to attend because of lack of funds.[3] In 1914, she became engaged to the barrister Alfred Towers Settle, marrying him four years later in November 1918.[citation needed] Alfred died of tuberculosis in 1925, leaving Settle with their two young children Margaret and John.[citation needed] She never remarried.[citation needed]

Career

In 1926, Settle became editor of British Vogue, working for Edna Woolman Chase, the American editor-in-chief of the three existing editions of Vogue, staying in her position for the next 9 years.[4] Under her management, the magazine first employed influential writers including Virginia Woolf, Edith Sitwell and Vita Sackville-West.[5]

Settle left Vogue in 1935 under strained circumstances, spending the subsequent year writing the book Clothes Line, published in 1937. In that year' she also became the fashion editor of

OBE for services to the journalism of fashion.[6] She was also a fashion columnist for The Lady for 27 years until 1972, which ended after Settle had a serious accident in Paris. Her book Fashion As A Career was published in 1963. Settle moved to Steyning (Sussex) after World War II. She died in Worthing on the autumn of 1980, at 89.[7]

References

  1. ^ 1891 England Census
  2. ^ University of Brighton Design Archives: Alison Settle Archive
  3. ^ "Alison Settle Archive". Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  4. ^ Ilaria Coser (2017): Alison Settle, Editor of British Vogue (1926–1935): Habitus and the Acquisition of Cultural, Social, and Symbolic Capital in the Private Diaries of Alison Settle, Fashion Theory, DOI: 10.1080/1362704X.2017.1371982 [1]
  5. ^ "Alison Settle (1891 - 1980) | European Feminist Research Conference, Graz University of Technology, Austria". arts.brighton.ac.uk. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  6. ^ The Times (10 June 1961) 10
  7. ^ 'Mrs Alison Settle,' The Times (20 Sep 1980) 14
Media offices
Preceded by Editor of British
Vogue

1926–1935
Succeeded by
Elizabeth Penrose