HILDA MARTINDALE C.B.E

1875 - 1952

 

Hilda Martindale was born a posthumous child in 1875, six months after her mother was widowed. Along with her elder sister Louisa she was brought into her mother's political and social interests and was exposed at an early age to lectures by Mrs Josephine Butler, Mrs Annie Besant, and Miss Jane Cobden (later Mrs Fisher Unwin) who was the first woman to serve on the London County Council. The sisters met leading supporters of the Women's Cause and of Liberalism and were taken abroad to Europe, from time to time missing a term's schooling !

Following her sister to the Brighton High School when the family moved to 2 Lancaster Road, Preston, Brighton. Hilda also followed Louisa to the Royal Holloway College in Egham 1893 -1895 going on in 1897 to Bedford College to study Hygiene and Sanitary Science which involved visits to Poor Law Institutions and investigating the treatment of Pauper Children in the care of the state.

After the family trip around the world in 1900, in 1901 she was interviewed by Miss (later Dame) Adelaide Anderson the Principal Lady Inspector of Factories at the Home Office and was offered a job as one of 6 Lady Inspectors. The work involved visiting factories, and industrial workshops which employed women and children and ascertaining that the laws on their conditions of employment were upheld by employers. Permitted length of hours of employment were frequently ignored, statutory meal breaks curtailed, the law against Sunday Working often abused and it was the job of the Lady Inspector to make routine visits - often after complaints from the women - and to prosecute offending employers.

In 1912 Hilda was promoted to Senior Lady Inspector and became involved with women workers in the potteries of the Midlands who suffered greatly from lead poisoning acquired from from processes in making china and earthenware. The Lady Inspectors also reported on Industrial Injuries sustained by women and gave evidence at Inquests and during the War (First) they were involved with the safety of women workers who took up heavy industrial labour. In 1921 the men's and women's sides of the Factory Inspectorate were merged and Hilda became Superintending Inspector for the Southern Division (with a male deputy) and in 1925 was promoted to one of 3 Deputy Chief Inspectors: in 1933 she moved into the Administrative Civil Service and eventually obtained the most prestigious post of Director of Women Establishments at HM Treasury. With responsibility for 77,00 women civil servants Hilda Martindale enjoyed her office near Downing Street with its panelled walls and blue silk carpet, and the invitations to Royal Garden Parties where she represented the women. She retired in 1937 but continued to serve on many Trade Boards and Educational Councils, as an Advisor to the Government, lecturing at the University, and writing. She died in 1957.

Hilda Martindale's Will left money and the resolution that her bequest should be used to create an educational charity designed to financially assist girls and women of the British Isles intending to fit themselves for some profession or career likely to be of use or value to the community.

The Hilda Martindale Educational Trust exists today and can award grants from £500 - £1000 when all other avenues of funding have been exhausted. Candidates must be age 21 or over. The Trust is administered at The Royal Holloway College, London to whom applications for assistance should be made.

 

Read more:

"From one Generation to Another, A Book of Memoirs " by Hilda Martindale 1944

Thanks to:

Archives. Royal Holloway, University of London.

 

Big but plain detached family home; double fronted but with bays only to ground floor. White painted, in need of attention.
The Martindale Home at 2 Lancaster Road Preston Brighton, now sadly in a poor state of repair.

 

Side entrance to the school; pillars leading up to the door have had to be cut to get the photo to a size that will fit !  Square, multiwindowed, pilasters on the ground floor with windows between prop up the 1st storey large windows. Dormer windows in the slated roof .Not much changed from 1880's.

Brighton High School today - renamed Brighton and Hove High School - in Montpelier Road in Hove.

Louisa Martindale also attended Brighton High School, as did Constance Black and Amy Levy. Edith Creak was the first headmistress.

 

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Elizabeth Allan Ivy Compton-Burnett Hilda Martindale Rukhmabai
Enid Bagnold Marie Corelli Dr Louisa Martindale Victoria, Lady Sackville
Colonel Sir Victor Barker DSO Anna Maria Crouch Mrs Louisa Martindale Flora Sassoon
Clementina Black Christiana Edmunds The Chocolate Cream Poisoner Eleanor Marx Amy Sedgwick
Constance Black Garnett Elinor Glyn Harriot Mellon, Duchess of St Albans Nancy Spain
Mary Elizabeth Braddon Martha Gunn Anna Neagle Mrs Hester Thrale Piozzi
Brighton Trunk Murders Phoebe Hessel Katie "Kitty" O'Shea Angela Thirkell
Dr Helen Boyle Celia Holloway- The First Trunk Murder Mrs Lucy Packham Vesta Tilley
Ellen Nye Chart Dr Sophia Jex-Blake Elizabeth Robins Dr Octavia Wilberforce
Mrs Maria Fitzherbert Amy Levy Flora Robson Grace Eyre Woodhead