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Mairin Mitchell

Mairin Marian Mitchell FRGS (20 May 1895 – 5 October 1986), registered at birth as Marian Houghton Mitchell, was a British and Irish journalist and author, mostly on political, naval, and historical subjects. She was also a translator from Spanish to English.

Mairin Mitchell
Mitchell in 1920
Born
Marian Houghton Mitchell

(1895-05-20)20 May 1895
Died5 October 1986(1986-10-05) (aged 91)
Nationality
  • Irish
  • English
EducationSt Winifred's School
Bedford College, London
Occupation(s)Journalist, author, and translator
Signature

Early life edit

 
Ambleside

Born at Darlington, County Durham,[1] Mitchell was the daughter of an Irish-born general practitioner at Ambleside, Westmorland, Dr Thomas Houghton Mitchell, and his wife Gertrude Emily Pease.[2] They had married at Darlington in June 1894.[1] His wife's father, Edward Thomas Pease, was a wine and spirit merchant at Darlington and died in 1897, leaving a substantial fortune.[3]

Dr Mitchell had two brothers who were also doctors.[2] In 1901, his older brother Adam G. Mitchell was a GP at Kinnitty, King's County, Ireland.[4] Their Church of Ireland father, Adam Mitchell, Esq., of Parsonstown, was Sessional Crown Solicitor for King's County.[5]

 
St Winifred's, Bron Castell, Bangor

The oldest of her parents’ four children, Mitchell had twin sisters, Edith and Gertrude, and a brother, Edward Pease Houghton Mitchell.[1][2] She was educated away from home at St Winifred's, a boarding school for girls in Bangor, North Wales,[1] and at Bedford College, London.[6]

Mitchell's brother Edward passed out of Sandhurst in 1916[7] and died near the end of the First World War, while serving as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Air Force.[2] Her mother died in 1935, leaving some £5,500,[8] and her father in 1946.[2]

Career edit

Soon after the end of the First World War, Mitchell, an aspiring writer, was living in London and was a member of a circle of anarchists. She later recalled an evening on a rooftop talking of Marx, Hegelian dialectic, communalism, and the future of Ireland, and commented on it "Better in youth the endless talk, even the “isms” that show the divine discontent, than the young who do not question and who never rebel."[9]

 
SS Minnedosa in 1921

On a whim, Mitchell took a job as a ship's stenographer on the Canadian Pacific liner SS Minnedosa, which took her to Canada. There, she was initiated into the Iroquois at Kahnawake, before returning to England with Minnedosa. She did further work for Canadian Pacific.[10]

Mitchell became a journalist and London correspondent for Irish newspapers. She also wrote poems and books, choosing to use the Irish form of her first name.[11] In a copy of her A Shuiler Sings (1932) she wrote an inscription in Irish and signed her name as "Máirín Ní Mhaol Mhicheil".[12]

In the 1930s, Mitchell was corresponding with Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington about arrangements for meetings of the Women Writers’ Club and the Roger Casement Committee, and about other matters,[13] such as infiltration of the political system in the Irish Free State by fascist and reactionary ideas.[14] The two met many times, and in 1946 Mitchell wrote an obituary of Sheehy-Skeffington for the Connolly Association’s Irish Democrat, concluding that "... her loss to the London-Irish is as great as that to those at home."[15]

In 1935, Mitchell’s book Traveller in Time, set in Ireland in 1942, explores a fantastic development of the age of television in the context of Irish history.[16] Colm MacColgan, her traveller, uses his invention of "Tempevision" to tune in to events at different times and places in the past, observing the impacts of the Irish around Europe and beyond.[17] A glowing review of the work in An Gaedheal reported that Mitchell was one of the most enthusiastic members of the Gaelic League in London and urged its readers "GAELS, read this book!"[17] In the same year, Mitchell wrote of a visit to Budapest in "An Irishwoman in Hungary".[18]

While he was writing Homage to Catalonia,[11] George Orwell reviewed Mitchell's Storm over Spain (1937) for Time and Tide and commended its well-informed analysis, adding that it was "written by a Catholic, but very sympathetic to the Spanish Anarchists".[19] Mitchell wrote to Orwell to thank him for his review but added that she had read The Road to Wigan Pier, and in politics they were on different sides. She also stated that she was Irish, rather than English, as he had supposed.[11] Fredric Warburg, the publisher of Storm Over Spain, later wrote that the book had been "a flop", but added that it was "the only pacifist study I ever read of the Spanish War".[20]

In 1939, Mitchell was highly critical of the Irish leftists for their views on the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and wrote to Desmond Ryan in September "Brian O'Neill, Bloomsbury, and Daiken will sing Russia right or wrong."[21]

From 1937 to 1939 Mitchell travelled in Europe, visiting France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Scandinavia, and Liechtenstein, and her Back to England (1940) describes her travels and adds her thoughts on conditions in Britain in 1940. It was later republished by the Right Book Club as its book of the month.[11] In Liechtenstein in 1937 she gave the head of government a copy of the new Constitution of Ireland.[22] Martin Tyrrell has described Mitchell's political views as being similar to the distributism associated with Hilaire Belloc and G. K. Chesterton.[11]

During the Second World War, Mitchell worked in sea ports as an interpreter.[23]

In April 1940, an article appeared in Irish Freedom under Mitchell's name, praising Betsy Gray and urging Irish women to follow her example and support the Irish Republican and Labour movement. In the next month's issue, an apology was printed which made it clear that Mitchell had not written the article and that her name had been printed in error.[24]

Mitchell's Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland (1941) was written while she was serving at sea.[25] In this, Mitchell described herself as a British citizen of Irish parentage. She praised de Valera and his policy of neutrality, but foresaw great impacts on Ireland from the outcome of the war in the Atlantic.[26] She wished to see "a Federation of the British and American Commonwealths", based on sea power,[27] and an end to the partition of Ireland, with a reunited Ireland joining an Atlantic alliance with Britain and the United States.[25]

By 1946, Mitchell was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society[2] and she also became a contributor to Encyclopædia Britannica.[28]

Of Mitchell's The Maritime History of Russia 848–1948 (1949), the Naval Review said "This is history in unusual form, if form it is, or indeed if history it is. The author holds firmly to the central idea that Russia has, mainly from the time of Peter the Great, been forcing her way outwards to become an oceanic animal as well as a land animal."[29] The book was also published in French and Turkish.[30]

In November 1953, The London Gazette recorded Miss Marian Houghton Mitchell as the personal representative of James Garrett Peacocke, deceased, retired merchant seaman, of Walworth, who had died in September of that year.[31]

After the Second World War, Mitchell lived for long periods in Tolosa and Zumaia in the Basque Country and became a friend of leading Basques, including José de Arteche, Koldo Mitxelena, and Manuel de Irujo.[32] She relied largely on work by Arteche for her two biographies of Basques on Pacific voyages of discovery, Juan Sebastián Elcano and Andrés de Urdaneta.[33] Of her Elcano the First Circumnavigator (1958) the British Book News said that while written for the general reader, it was the result of wide reading and research in Spanish archives.[34] Her Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, O.S.A. did not appear until 1964.[33] Meanwhile, her The Bridge of San Miguel (1960) was a fictionalized account of the first European sighting of the Pacific Ocean by Vasco Nunez de Balboa in 1513, with a map of the Isthmus of Panama showing the route taken by Balboa.[35] Her last book, published in 1986, was a study of Berengaria of Navarre, the Basque queen of Richard I of England.[36]

In 1960, Mitchell moved from Highgate Avenue, London N6, to Claygate in Surrey.[37] In 1981, she was living at Dawes House, Burwash, East Sussex, and died at Holy Cross Priory, Cross-in-Hand, on 5 October 1986, aged 91.[1][38] She was cremated in Kent on 10 October.[39]

Commemoration edit

Running from March 2022 to February 2023,[32] a Mairin Mitchell exhibition was arranged by the Biscay Provincial Council at the Basque Country Museum in Guernica, curated by Xabier Armendariz, to celebrate Mitchell’s influence in the Basque Country. In reporting on it, the Irish Examiner noted that Mitchell was "honoured abroad but unknown at home".[22]

Selected works edit

Books
  • Songs of the South, The Hidden Land, Pedlar’s Pieces, Road Rhymes (verse)[40]
  • A Shuiler Sings (London: M. Michael, The Columbia Press, 1932), a collection of short poems dealing with Ireland.[41]
  • Traveller in Time (London: Sheed & Ward, 1935)[42]
  • Storm over Spain (London: Secker & Warburg, 1937)
  • Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland (London: F. Muller Ltd. 1941)
  • Back to England: an Account of the Author's Travels on the Continent from 1937 to 1939 and Her Observations on Wartime Conditions in Britain in 1940 (1940; Right Book Club, 1942)
  • The Red Fleet and the Royal Navy (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1942)
  • We Can Keep the Peace (London: Grout Publishing Co., 1945)
  • The Maritime History of Russia 848–1948 (London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1949 ASIN B0006D95RU)
  • The Odyssey of Acurio who sailed with Magellan (London: Heinemann, 1956)
  • Elcano the First Circumnavigator (London: Herder, 1958)
  • The Bridge of San Miguel (London: Herder, 1960, ASIN B0000CKV0C)
  • Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, O.S.A. (1508–1568) Pioneer of Pacific Navigation from West to East (London: Macdonald and Evans, 1964)
  • Berengaria: Enigmatic Queen of England (Burwash Weald, East Sussex: A. Wright, 1986, ISBN 0951181505)
Articles

Translations edit

  • José de Arteche, The Cardinal of Africa, Charles Lavigerie, Founder of the White Fathers translated by Mairin Mitchell (London: Sands & Co., 1964; Catholic Book Club, 1964)
  • Fray Maria Pablo Garcia Gorriz, The Visigothic Basilica of San Juan De Banos and Visigothic Art, English version by Mairin Mitchell (Diario-Dia, 1973, ASIN B00A0N101U) a study of the Church of San Juan Bautista, Baños de Cerrato
  • Mairin Mitchell, Histoire maritime de la Russie (Paris: Editions Deux Rives, 1952), translated into French by René Jouan
  • Mairin Mitchell, Die Odyssee des Juan de Acurio: Der Roman d. ersten Weltumseglung (Wiesbaden: Rheinische Verlags-Anstalt, 1958), translated into German by Margaretha von Reischach-Scheffel
  • Mairin Mitchell, Rusyanın denizcilik tarihi (Istanbul: Deniz Basımevi, 1974), The Maritime History of Russia translated into Turkish by Sermet Gökdeniz

As editor edit

  • José Luis Martín Descalzo, A Priest Confesses, translated into English by Rita Goldberg, ed. Mairin Mitchell (The Catholic Book Club, 1962)

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Thomas Houghton Mitchell" in England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973; "Marian Houghton Mitchell" in England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837–1915, ancestry.co.uk; 1911 United Kingdom Census, "St Winifred’s School, Bangor", ancestry.co.uk; "Mairin Marion Mitchell" in England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916–2007, ancestry.co.uk; accessed 30 July 2021 (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Obituary: Dr Thomas Houghton Mitchell", British Medical Journal, 21 September 1946, 2:443, https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.4472.443
  3. ^ "PEASE Edward Thomas of "Oak Lea" Darlington wine and spirit-merchant died 27 December 1897… Effects £88929 15s 7d." [equivalent to £12,512,643 in 2023] in Wills and Administrations (England & Wales) 1898 (1899), p. 123
  4. ^ 1901 United Kingdom Census, "Adam G Mitchell": "3, The Walk, Kinnetty, King's Co., Ireland / Adam G Mitchell / Male / Married / 42 / Head of Family / Medical Practitioner / Religion: Church of Ireland / Birth Place: Limerick", ancestry.co.uk, accessed 26 August 2021 (subscription required)
  5. ^ "Notes of Works", Irish Builder and Engineer 1 February 1891, Vol. 33 (1891), p. 33
  6. ^ "Mitchell, Marian Houghton" in Calendar (University of London, 1915), p. 303
  7. ^ The London Gazette, Issue 29708, 15 August 1916, p. 8029
  8. ^ "MITCHELL Gertrude Emily of Rothay Garth Ambleside Westmorland (wife of Thomas Houghton Mitchell) died 22 January 1935… Effects £5584 3s." [equivalent to £489,620 in 2023] in Wills and Administrations (England & Wales) 1935 (1936), p. 402
  9. ^ Mairin Mitchell, Storm Over Spain (London: Secker & Warburg, 1937), pp. 132-133
  10. ^ Mairin Mitchell, Back to England (London: Right Book Club, 1942), pp. 22–23
  11. ^ a b c d e Martin Tyrrell, "Spanish Sketches", Dublin Review of Books, July 2021, accessed 30 July 2021
  12. ^ Fonsie Mealy Auctioneers Summer Rare Books Catalogue, scribd.com, accessed 16 August 2021: "Mitchell (Maírín) A Shuiler Sings, 8vo L. (Michael The Columbia Press) n.d.. Inscribed 'E. Lafavelle Le Meas Moír, Mairin Ni Mhaol Mhicheil' ptd. wrappers" (subscription required)
  13. ^ Éilis Ní Dhuibhne, "Collection List No. 47 Sheehy Skeffington Papers", National Library of Ireland, p. 69, accessed 12 August 2021
  14. ^ Katrina Goldstone, Irish Writers and the Thirties: Art, Exile and War (London: Routledge, 29 December 2020), p. 82
  15. ^ Mairin Mitchell, "A Great Irishwoman", in The Irish Democrat No. 19, July 1946, p. 5
  16. ^ "Traveller in Time. By Mairin Mitchell, Sheed and Ward, 7s. 6d." in The New Statesman and Nation, Vol. 11 (1936), p. 52
  17. ^ a b "GAELS, read this book!", in An Gaedheal, January 1936, p. 5
  18. ^ "An Irishwoman in Hungary", The Irish Press, 21 September 1935
  19. ^ George Orwell, "Review Storm over Spain by Mairin Mitchell" in The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell: An age like this, 1920-1940 (Secker & Warburg, 1968), pp. 296–297
  20. ^ Fredric Warburg, An Occupation for Gentlemen (Plunkett Lake Press, 2019), p. 142
  21. ^ Goldstone (2020), p. 153
  22. ^ a b Clodagh Finn, "Meet Mairin Mitchell — honoured abroad but unknown at home", Irish Examiner, 18 May 2022, accessed 11 September 2022
  23. ^ "Publisher’s Note", The Red Fleet and the Royal Navy (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1942), p. iii
  24. ^ "Betsy Gray", Irish Freedom No. 16, April 1940, p. 2; "Apology", Irish Freedom No. 17, May 1940, p. 2; connollyassociation.org.uk, accessed 22 August 2021
  25. ^ a b Clair Wills, That Neutral Island: A Cultural History of Ireland During the Second World War (London: Faber, 2007), p. 125
  26. ^ "The vast extent of Hitler’s coast-line" (review) in Illustrated London News, 4 October 1941, p. 6
  27. ^ "Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland. By Mairin Mitchell. 1941. (London: Frederick Muller. Sm. 8vo. 72 pp. 1s. 3d.)" in International Affairs Review Supplement, Vol. 19, Issue 6, September 1941, p. 337
  28. ^ "Mairin Mitchell", britannica.com, accessed 30 July 2021; "Mairin Mitchell, Freelance writer" in The New Encyclopaedia Britannica: Propaedia (1997), p. 725
  29. ^ Naval Review (London), Vol. 38 (1950), p. 222
  30. ^ Histoire maritime de la Russie (Paris: Editions Deux Rives, 1952), translated into French by René Jouan; Rusyanın denizcilik tarihi (Istanbul: Deniz Basımevi, 1974), translated into Turkish by Sermet Gökdeniz
  31. ^ The London Gazette, Issue 40028, 27 November 1953, p. 6506
  32. ^ a b "MAIRIN MITCHELL. EUSKALDUNEN KRONIKARI IRLANDARRA", euskadi.eus (Government of the Basque Country) accessed 11 September 2022 (in Basque)
  33. ^ a b William A. Douglass, Basque Explorers in the Pacific Ocean (Reno: Center for Basque Studies of the University of Nevada, 2015), p. 8
  34. ^ British Book News (1958), p. 748
  35. ^ "New Fiction" in Birmingham Daily Post, 3 January 1961, p. 22
  36. ^ Mairin Mitchell, Berengaria: Enigmatic Queen of England (East Sussex: A. Wright, 1 December 1986, ISBN 0951181505)
  37. ^ Correspondence file, Mairin Mitchell to Manuel de Irujo, eusko-ikaskuntza.eus, accessed 30 August 2021
  38. ^ "MITCHELL Mairin Marian of Room 19 Holy Cross Priory Cross-in-Hand E Sx died 5 October 1986" in Wills and Administrations 1987 (England and Wales), p. 5429
  39. ^ "Cremation Register summary Mitchell, Mairin Marian, cremation date 10 October 1986, location Kent", deceasedonline.com, accessed 30 August 2021
  40. ^ "MAIRIN MITCHELL", Irish Freedom, No. 50, February 1943, p. 8
  41. ^ Studies, Vol. 22 (1933), p. 176
  42. ^ John Lyle Donaghy, "Review of Traveller in time, by Máirín Mitchell", The Dublin Magazine, Vol. XI, New Series, No. 4, October–December 1936, pp. 91-93
  43. ^ Mairin Mitchell, "Eire of the Swift Ships", in Irish Freedom, No. 50, February 1943, p. 8
  44. ^ Mairin Mitchell, "Ferdinand Magellan, Portuguese explorer", Encyclopædia Britannica, accessed 26 August 2021

External links edit

mairin, mitchell, mairin, marian, mitchell, frgs, 1895, october, 1986, registered, birth, marian, houghton, mitchell, british, irish, journalist, author, mostly, political, naval, historical, subjects, also, translator, from, spanish, english, mitchell, 1920bo. Mairin Marian Mitchell FRGS 20 May 1895 5 October 1986 registered at birth as Marian Houghton Mitchell was a British and Irish journalist and author mostly on political naval and historical subjects She was also a translator from Spanish to English Mairin MitchellMitchell in 1920BornMarian Houghton Mitchell 1895 05 20 20 May 1895Darlington County Durham EnglandDied5 October 1986 1986 10 05 aged 91 Holy Cross Priory Cross in HandNationalityIrishEnglishEducationSt Winifred s SchoolBedford College LondonOccupation s Journalist author and translatorSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Commemoration 4 Selected works 5 Translations 6 As editor 7 Notes 8 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Ambleside Born at Darlington County Durham 1 Mitchell was the daughter of an Irish born general practitioner at Ambleside Westmorland Dr Thomas Houghton Mitchell and his wife Gertrude Emily Pease 2 They had married at Darlington in June 1894 1 His wife s father Edward Thomas Pease was a wine and spirit merchant at Darlington and died in 1897 leaving a substantial fortune 3 Dr Mitchell had two brothers who were also doctors 2 In 1901 his older brother Adam G Mitchell was a GP at Kinnitty King s County Ireland 4 Their Church of Ireland father Adam Mitchell Esq of Parsonstown was Sessional Crown Solicitor for King s County 5 nbsp St Winifred s Bron Castell Bangor The oldest of her parents four children Mitchell had twin sisters Edith and Gertrude and a brother Edward Pease Houghton Mitchell 1 2 She was educated away from home at St Winifred s a boarding school for girls in Bangor North Wales 1 and at Bedford College London 6 Mitchell s brother Edward passed out of Sandhurst in 1916 7 and died near the end of the First World War while serving as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Air Force 2 Her mother died in 1935 leaving some 5 500 8 and her father in 1946 2 Career editSoon after the end of the First World War Mitchell an aspiring writer was living in London and was a member of a circle of anarchists She later recalled an evening on a rooftop talking of Marx Hegelian dialectic communalism and the future of Ireland and commented on it Better in youth the endless talk even the isms that show the divine discontent than the young who do not question and who never rebel 9 nbsp SS Minnedosa in 1921 On a whim Mitchell took a job as a ship s stenographer on the Canadian Pacific liner SS Minnedosa which took her to Canada There she was initiated into the Iroquois at Kahnawake before returning to England with Minnedosa She did further work for Canadian Pacific 10 Mitchell became a journalist and London correspondent for Irish newspapers She also wrote poems and books choosing to use the Irish form of her first name 11 In a copy of her A Shuiler Sings 1932 she wrote an inscription in Irish and signed her name as Mairin Ni Mhaol Mhicheil 12 In the 1930s Mitchell was corresponding with Hanna Sheehy Skeffington about arrangements for meetings of the Women Writers Club and the Roger Casement Committee and about other matters 13 such as infiltration of the political system in the Irish Free State by fascist and reactionary ideas 14 The two met many times and in 1946 Mitchell wrote an obituary of Sheehy Skeffington for the Connolly Association s Irish Democrat concluding that her loss to the London Irish is as great as that to those at home 15 In 1935 Mitchell s book Traveller in Time set in Ireland in 1942 explores a fantastic development of the age of television in the context of Irish history 16 Colm MacColgan her traveller uses his invention of Tempevision to tune in to events at different times and places in the past observing the impacts of the Irish around Europe and beyond 17 A glowing review of the work in An Gaedheal reported that Mitchell was one of the most enthusiastic members of the Gaelic League in London and urged its readers GAELS read this book 17 In the same year Mitchell wrote of a visit to Budapest in An Irishwoman in Hungary 18 While he was writing Homage to Catalonia 11 George Orwell reviewed Mitchell s Storm over Spain 1937 for Time and Tide and commended its well informed analysis adding that it was written by a Catholic but very sympathetic to the Spanish Anarchists 19 Mitchell wrote to Orwell to thank him for his review but added that she had read The Road to Wigan Pier and in politics they were on different sides She also stated that she was Irish rather than English as he had supposed 11 Fredric Warburg the publisher of Storm Over Spain later wrote that the book had been a flop but added that it was the only pacifist study I ever read of the Spanish War 20 In 1939 Mitchell was highly critical of the Irish leftists for their views on the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and wrote to Desmond Ryan in September Brian O Neill Bloomsbury and Daiken will sing Russia right or wrong 21 From 1937 to 1939 Mitchell travelled in Europe visiting France Germany Italy Switzerland Scandinavia and Liechtenstein and her Back to England 1940 describes her travels and adds her thoughts on conditions in Britain in 1940 It was later republished by the Right Book Club as its book of the month 11 In Liechtenstein in 1937 she gave the head of government a copy of the new Constitution of Ireland 22 Martin Tyrrell has described Mitchell s political views as being similar to the distributism associated with Hilaire Belloc and G K Chesterton 11 During the Second World War Mitchell worked in sea ports as an interpreter 23 In April 1940 an article appeared in Irish Freedom under Mitchell s name praising Betsy Gray and urging Irish women to follow her example and support the Irish Republican and Labour movement In the next month s issue an apology was printed which made it clear that Mitchell had not written the article and that her name had been printed in error 24 Mitchell s Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland 1941 was written while she was serving at sea 25 In this Mitchell described herself as a British citizen of Irish parentage She praised de Valera and his policy of neutrality but foresaw great impacts on Ireland from the outcome of the war in the Atlantic 26 She wished to see a Federation of the British and American Commonwealths based on sea power 27 and an end to the partition of Ireland with a reunited Ireland joining an Atlantic alliance with Britain and the United States 25 By 1946 Mitchell was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society 2 and she also became a contributor to Encyclopaedia Britannica 28 Of Mitchell s The Maritime History of Russia 848 1948 1949 the Naval Review said This is history in unusual form if form it is or indeed if history it is The author holds firmly to the central idea that Russia has mainly from the time of Peter the Great been forcing her way outwards to become an oceanic animal as well as a land animal 29 The book was also published in French and Turkish 30 In November 1953 The London Gazette recorded Miss Marian Houghton Mitchell as the personal representative of James Garrett Peacocke deceased retired merchant seaman of Walworth who had died in September of that year 31 After the Second World War Mitchell lived for long periods in Tolosa and Zumaia in the Basque Country and became a friend of leading Basques including Jose de Arteche Koldo Mitxelena and Manuel de Irujo 32 She relied largely on work by Arteche for her two biographies of Basques on Pacific voyages of discovery Juan Sebastian Elcano and Andres de Urdaneta 33 Of her Elcano the First Circumnavigator 1958 the British Book News said that while written for the general reader it was the result of wide reading and research in Spanish archives 34 Her Friar Andres de Urdaneta O S A did not appear until 1964 33 Meanwhile her The Bridge of San Miguel 1960 was a fictionalized account of the first European sighting of the Pacific Ocean by Vasco Nunez de Balboa in 1513 with a map of the Isthmus of Panama showing the route taken by Balboa 35 Her last book published in 1986 was a study of Berengaria of Navarre the Basque queen of Richard I of England 36 In 1960 Mitchell moved from Highgate Avenue London N6 to Claygate in Surrey 37 In 1981 she was living at Dawes House Burwash East Sussex and died at Holy Cross Priory Cross in Hand on 5 October 1986 aged 91 1 38 She was cremated in Kent on 10 October 39 Commemoration editRunning from March 2022 to February 2023 32 a Mairin Mitchell exhibition was arranged by the Biscay Provincial Council at the Basque Country Museum in Guernica curated by Xabier Armendariz to celebrate Mitchell s influence in the Basque Country In reporting on it the Irish Examiner noted that Mitchell was honoured abroad but unknown at home 22 Selected works editBooks Songs of the South The Hidden Land Pedlar s Pieces Road Rhymes verse 40 A Shuiler Sings London M Michael The Columbia Press 1932 a collection of short poems dealing with Ireland 41 Traveller in Time London Sheed amp Ward 1935 42 Storm over Spain London Secker amp Warburg 1937 Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland London F Muller Ltd 1941 Back to England an Account of the Author s Travels on the Continent from 1937 to 1939 and Her Observations on Wartime Conditions in Britain in 1940 1940 Right Book Club 1942 The Red Fleet and the Royal Navy London Hodder amp Stoughton 1942 We Can Keep the Peace London Grout Publishing Co 1945 The Maritime History of Russia 848 1948 London Sidgwick amp Jackson 1949 ASIN B0006D95RU The Odyssey of Acurio who sailed with Magellan London Heinemann 1956 Elcano the First Circumnavigator London Herder 1958 The Bridge of San Miguel London Herder 1960 ASIN B0000CKV0C Friar Andres de Urdaneta O S A 1508 1568 Pioneer of Pacific Navigation from West to East London Macdonald and Evans 1964 Berengaria Enigmatic Queen of England Burwash Weald East Sussex A Wright 1986 ISBN 0951181505 Articles Catalonia and her People The Irish Press 17 October 1934 p 6 An Irishwoman in Hungary The Irish Press 21 September 1935 Eire of the Swift Ships in Irish Freedom No 50 February 1943 43 A Great Irishwoman tribute to Hanna Sheehy Skeffington in The Irish Democrat No 19 July 1946 p 5 Ferdinand Magellan Portuguese explorer in Encyclopaedia Britannica 44 Translations editJose de Arteche The Cardinal of Africa Charles Lavigerie Founder of the White Fathers translated by Mairin Mitchell London Sands amp Co 1964 Catholic Book Club 1964 Fray Maria Pablo Garcia Gorriz The Visigothic Basilica of San Juan De Banos and Visigothic Art English version by Mairin Mitchell Diario Dia 1973 ASIN B00A0N101U a study of the Church of San Juan Bautista Banos de Cerrato Mairin Mitchell Histoire maritime de la Russie Paris Editions Deux Rives 1952 translated into French by Rene Jouan Mairin Mitchell Die Odyssee des Juan de Acurio Der Roman d ersten Weltumseglung Wiesbaden Rheinische Verlags Anstalt 1958 translated into German by Margaretha von Reischach Scheffel Mairin Mitchell Rusyanin denizcilik tarihi Istanbul Deniz Basimevi 1974 The Maritime History of Russia translated into Turkish by Sermet GokdenizAs editor editJose Luis Martin Descalzo A Priest Confesses translated into English by Rita Goldberg ed Mairin Mitchell The Catholic Book Club 1962 Notes edit a b c d e Thomas Houghton Mitchell in England Select Marriages 1538 1973 Marian Houghton Mitchell in England amp Wales Civil Registration Birth Index 1837 1915 ancestry co uk 1911 United Kingdom Census St Winifred s School Bangor ancestry co uk Mairin Marion Mitchell in England amp Wales Civil Registration Death Index 1916 2007 ancestry co uk accessed 30 July 2021 subscription required a b c d e f Obituary Dr Thomas Houghton Mitchell British Medical Journal 21 September 1946 2 443 https doi org 10 1136 bmj 2 4472 443 PEASE Edward Thomas of Oak Lea Darlington wine and spirit merchant died 27 December 1897 Effects 88929 15s 7d equivalent to 12 512 643 in 2023 in Wills and Administrations England amp Wales 1898 1899 p 123 1901 United Kingdom Census Adam G Mitchell 3 The Walk Kinnetty King s Co Ireland Adam G Mitchell Male Married 42 Head of Family Medical Practitioner Religion Church of Ireland Birth Place Limerick ancestry co uk accessed 26 August 2021 subscription required Notes of Works Irish Builder and Engineer 1 February 1891 Vol 33 1891 p 33 Mitchell Marian Houghton in Calendar University of London 1915 p 303 The London Gazette Issue 29708 15 August 1916 p 8029 MITCHELL Gertrude Emily of Rothay Garth Ambleside Westmorland wife of Thomas Houghton Mitchell died 22 January 1935 Effects 5584 3s equivalent to 489 620 in 2023 in Wills and Administrations England amp Wales 1935 1936 p 402 Mairin Mitchell Storm Over Spain London Secker amp Warburg 1937 pp 132 133 Mairin Mitchell Back to England London Right Book Club 1942 pp 22 23 a b c d e Martin Tyrrell Spanish Sketches Dublin Review of Books July 2021 accessed 30 July 2021 Fonsie Mealy Auctioneers Summer Rare Books Catalogue scribd com accessed 16 August 2021 Mitchell Mairin A Shuiler Sings 8vo L Michael The Columbia Press n d Inscribed E Lafavelle Le Meas Moir Mairin Ni Mhaol Mhicheil ptd wrappers subscription required Eilis Ni Dhuibhne Collection List No 47 Sheehy Skeffington Papers National Library of Ireland p 69 accessed 12 August 2021 Katrina Goldstone Irish Writers and the Thirties Art Exile and War London Routledge 29 December 2020 p 82 Mairin Mitchell A Great Irishwoman in The Irish Democrat No 19 July 1946 p 5 Traveller in Time By Mairin Mitchell Sheed and Ward 7s 6d in The New Statesman and Nation Vol 11 1936 p 52 a b GAELS read this book in An Gaedheal January 1936 p 5 An Irishwoman in Hungary The Irish Press 21 September 1935 George Orwell Review Storm over Spain by Mairin Mitchell in The Collected Essays Journalism and Letters of George Orwell An age like this 1920 1940 Secker amp Warburg 1968 pp 296 297 Fredric Warburg An Occupation for Gentlemen Plunkett Lake Press 2019 p 142 Goldstone 2020 p 153 a b Clodagh Finn Meet Mairin Mitchell honoured abroad but unknown at home Irish Examiner 18 May 2022 accessed 11 September 2022 Publisher s Note The Red Fleet and the Royal Navy London Hodder amp Stoughton 1942 p iii Betsy Gray Irish Freedom No 16 April 1940 p 2 Apology Irish Freedom No 17 May 1940 p 2 connollyassociation org uk accessed 22 August 2021 a b Clair Wills That Neutral Island A Cultural History of Ireland During the Second World War London Faber 2007 p 125 The vast extent of Hitler s coast line review in Illustrated London News 4 October 1941 p 6 Atlantic Battle and the Future of Ireland By Mairin Mitchell 1941 London Frederick Muller Sm 8vo 72 pp 1s 3d in International Affairs Review Supplement Vol 19 Issue 6 September 1941 p 337 Mairin Mitchell britannica com accessed 30 July 2021 Mairin Mitchell Freelance writer in The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Propaedia 1997 p 725 Naval Review London Vol 38 1950 p 222 Histoire maritime de la Russie Paris Editions Deux Rives 1952 translated into French by Rene Jouan Rusyanin denizcilik tarihi Istanbul Deniz Basimevi 1974 translated into Turkish by Sermet Gokdeniz The London Gazette Issue 40028 27 November 1953 p 6506 a b MAIRIN MITCHELL EUSKALDUNEN KRONIKARI IRLANDARRA euskadi eus Government of the Basque Country accessed 11 September 2022 in Basque a b William A Douglass Basque Explorers in the Pacific Ocean Reno Center for Basque Studies of the University of Nevada 2015 p 8 British Book News 1958 p 748 New Fiction in Birmingham Daily Post 3 January 1961 p 22 Mairin Mitchell Berengaria Enigmatic Queen of England East Sussex A Wright 1 December 1986 ISBN 0951181505 Correspondence file Mairin Mitchell to Manuel de Irujo eusko ikaskuntza eus accessed 30 August 2021 MITCHELL Mairin Marian of Room 19 Holy Cross Priory Cross in Hand E Sx died 5 October 1986 in Wills and Administrations 1987 England and Wales p 5429 Cremation Register summary Mitchell Mairin Marian cremation date 10 October 1986 location Kent deceasedonline com accessed 30 August 2021 MAIRIN MITCHELL Irish Freedom No 50 February 1943 p 8 Studies Vol 22 1933 p 176 John Lyle Donaghy Review of Traveller in time by Mairin Mitchell The Dublin Magazine Vol XI New Series No 4 October December 1936 pp 91 93 Mairin Mitchell Eire of the Swift Ships in Irish Freedom No 50 February 1943 p 8 Mairin Mitchell Ferdinand Magellan Portuguese explorer Encyclopaedia Britannica accessed 26 August 2021External links editFerdinand Magellan Portuguese explorer by Mairin Mitchell Encyclopaedia Britannica Mairin Mitchell Euskaldunen Kronikari Irlandarra Mairin Mitchell Irish Chronicler of the Basques Government of the Basque Country Mitchell Mairin WorldCat Mitchell Mairin Open Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mairin Mitchell amp oldid 1220948540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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