Audrey Beecham
{{Short description|English poet, teacher and historian (1915–1989)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}
{{Infobox Writer
| name = Audrey Beecham
| image = Audrey_Beecham_or_Helen_Audrey_Beecham_died_1989.jpg
| imagesize =
| caption = by Tony Cowlishaw
| birth_name = Helen Audrey Beecham
| birth_date = 21 July 1915
| birth_place = Weaverham, Cheshire, England
| death_date = 31 January 1989 (aged 73)
| death_place = Churchill Hospital, Oxford, England
| occupation = Historian, writer
}}
Helen Audrey Beecham (21 July 1915 – 31 January 1989) was an English poet, teacher and historian.
She was born in Weaverham in 1915. Her grandfather was Sir Joseph Beecham, 1st Baronet, eldest son of Thomas Beecham, who had created a fortune with Beecham's Pills. Her uncle was the conductor Sir Thomas Beecham and her father devoted time to spending his inheritance. She took PPE at Somerville College in Oxford. She left with a second class degree and went to live in Paris in the group that included Henry Miller. She made a lasting friendship with the writers Lawrence Durrell and Anais Nin.
Beecham left Oxford and took a job at the University of Nottingham in 1950; she lectured and headed Nightingale Hall.Rachel Trickett, ‘Beecham, (Helen) Audrey (1915–1989)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2012 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/60731, accessed 13 March 2017] One anecdote tells of how when faced with demonstrating students intent on occupying one of the buildings she hid the weapons but supplied them with toilet paper. She memorably
noted that revolutionaries frequently forgot the loo rolls.[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/stepney-in-the-right-direction-1097710.html Stepney in the Right Direction], John Izbicki, 1999, The Independent, Retrieved 13 March 2017
Sir Maurice Bowra, Warden of Wadham and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford was engaged to her.{{cite magazine|url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/2009/04/in-a-class-of-his-own/|title=In a class of his own|first=Hugh|last=Cecil|magazine=The Spectator|date=7 April 2009}} Bowra, a homosexual, explained his engagement by saying "buggers can't be choosers".Christopher Hollis, Oxford in the Twenties (1976), p. 22. "Allegedly," according to Mitchell in Maurice Bowra: A Life (2009), p. 144 In 1957, she published her first book of poetry, The Coast of Barbary.{{cite book|author=Audrey Beecham|title=The Coasts of Barbary|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yVJLAAAAIAAJ&pg=PR1|year=1957|publisher=Hamilton}}
Death
Helen Audrey Beecham died in Churchill Hospital, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, England in 1989, aged 73, from asthma.{{cn|date=December 2022}}
References
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Category:People from Northwich
Category:Alumni of Somerville College, Oxford
Category:20th-century English poets
Category:20th-century English women writers
Category:20th-century English educators
Category:20th-century English historians
Category:Respiratory disease deaths in England
Category:English women non-fiction writers
Category:English women historians