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Valentine Ackland

Valentine Ackland
Full length picture of a woman with short hair, standing outdoors and holding a shotgun
Valentine Ackland in 1930
Born Mary Kathleen Macrory Ackland
(1906-05-20)20 May 1906
Westminster, London, England
Died 9 November 1969(1969-11-09) (aged 63)
Resting place St. Nicholas Churchyard, Chaldon Herring, Dorset
50°38′51″N 2°17′54″W / 50.647506°N 2.298370°W / 50.647506; -2.298370
Nationality British
Occupation Poet
Political party Communist Party
Spouse(s) Richard Turpin (annulled)
Parent(s)
  • Robert Craig Ackland
  • Ruth Kathleen (née Macrory)

Valentine Ackland (20 May 1906 – 9 November 1969) was an English poet, an important figure in the emergence of modernism in twentieth-century British poetry.

Ackland was born Mary Kathleen Macrory Ackland in Westminster, London to Robert Craig Ackland and his wife Ruth Kathleen (née Macrory), and nicknamed "Molly" by her family. With no sons born to the family, Valentine's father, a West End London dentist, worked at making a symbolic son of Molly, teaching her to shoot rifles and to box. This attention to Molly made her sister Joan Alice Elizabeth (b. 1898) immensely jealous. Older by eight years, Joan psychologically tormented and physically abused Molly as a way of unleashing her jealousy and anger.

Molly received an Anglo-Catholic upbringing in Norfolk and a convent school education in London. In 1925 at the age of nineteen, she impetuously married Richard Turpin, a homosexual youth who was unable to consummate their marriage. Upon her marriage, she was also received into the Catholic church, a religion that she later abandoned, returned to, and then abandoned again in the last decade of her life. In less than a year, she had her marriage to Turpin annulled, and, despite numerous pleas from her family and much psychological pressure from them, never returned to a serious relationship with a man again.

Alert to social mores of her day, she became aware of societal patterns of male privilege and female submission set about challenging the female gender identifications expected of her. She took to wearing men's clothing, cut her hair in a short style called the Eton crop, and was at times mistaken for a handsome young boy. She changed her name to the androgynous Valentine Ackland when she decided to become a serious poet in the late 1920s. Her poetry appeared in British and American literary journals during the 1920s to the 1940s, but Ackland deeply regretted that she never became a noted and widely read poet. In this regard, much of her poetry was published posthumously, and she received little attention from critics until a revival of interest in her work in the 1970s.

In 1930, Ackland was introduced to the short story writer and novelist Sylvia Townsend Warner, with whom she had a lifelong relationship, albeit tumultuous at times given Ackland's increasing alcoholism and infidelities. Warner was twelve years older than Ackland, and the two lived together until Ackland's death from breast cancer in 1969. Warner went on to outlive Ackland by nine years, dying in 1978. The pair were together for thirty-nine years. Ackland's reflections upon her relationship with Warner and the former's long affair with American heiress and writer Elizabeth Wade White (1908–1994), were posthumously published in For Sylvia: An Honest Account (1985).


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