Maud Grieve

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Maud Grieve in 1928

Sophie Emma Magdalene Grieve (née Law;

Buckinghamshire, England.[3]

Grieve was a Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society, President of the British Guild of Herb Growers, and Fellow of the British Science Guild. She is best known for her 1931 book, A Modern Herbal.[citation needed]

Life

Grieve was born in 1858 at 75 Upper Street,

Calcutta
from 1878 to 1894. Grieve was involved with charitable causes and had connections with a medical mission during her time in Calcutta.

She and her husband lived in India until his retirement.[4] Although William retired from the paper mills in 1894, the couple only returned to settle permanently back in England in the beginning of the 1900s. They lived in a number of places including Hayes in Middlesex and Chartridge in Buckinghamshire, before moving to the house that William had designed at Chalfont Common, Chalfont St Peter around 1906. They named it The Whins after the yellow gorse that grew in the neighbourhood.

She lived in Chalfont St Peter from 1906 to 1938. She initially created a

monkshood
. The National Herb Growing Association was set up by a group of educated women under the auspices of the Women's Farm & Garden Union.

She was a founder member of the short lived National Herb Growing Association (1914–17) and later president of The British Guild of Herb Growers (est. 1918.) During the war she also started The Whins Medicinal and Commercial Herb School. After the war she continued promoting the benefits of herbs, writing over three hundred pamphlets on individual plants. These were edited by Hilda Leyel and were the main source of information in what has become A Modern Herbal, which was published 1931.[5] As the original pamphlets were only about English plants, Mrs. Leyel added American herbs to Mrs. Grieve's pamphlets and checked and edited the whole work, expanding it to eight hundred plants.[6]

In 1929 her husband's health became a concern and she decided to move away from herb production and training. She gave most of her stock to Dorothy Hewer. Hewer had started her herbal farm three years before near the Kentish village of Seal where she became known for her "Seal" lavender. Hewer had been inspired by Grieve and by the work of the gardening writer Eleanour Sinclair Rohde. Grieve had closed her training school and she encouraged Hewer to take on a few women helpers.[7]

Grieve wrote Culinary herbs and condiments and Roses and pot pourri: Plants of sweet scent and their employment in perfumery.[2]

Death and legacy

She died in 1941 in

Kew Herbarium library and others are in a private collection. Only a couple of her art works survive, an oil painting of an Indian street scene which she submitted to the 1884 Calcutta International Exhibition and the illustrations of croton plants, which are now in the Herbarium Library, Kew.[citation needed
]

References

  1. ^ General Register office of England and Wales. Births, June Quarter 1858.
  2. ^ a b "Margaret Grieve". www.librarything.com.
  3. ^ a b "News-new additions". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Baker, A. (2004-09-23). Grieve [née Law], Sophia Emma Magdalene [Maud] (1858–1941), herb grower. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 2 Jan. 2018, See link
  5. ^ .
  6. ^ Editor's Introduction - A Modern Herbal The Medicinal, Culinary, Cosmetic and Economic Properties, Cultivation and Folk-Lore of Herbs, Grasses, Fungi, Shrubs & Trees with their Modern Scientific Uses. Mrs. M. Grieve F.R.H.S. Edited and introduced by Mrs. C. F. Leyel
  7. , retrieved 20 February 2023
  8. ^ Library: Reference: GB 0237 Dc.3.97/1-4; Dc.3.98; Title: Collection of material relating to Mrs. Maud Grieve, F.R.H.S (fl. 1937)

External links