Virginia Surtees (née Bell, formerly Virginia, Lady Clarke and Virginia Craig) (9 January 1917 – 22 September 2017) was a British art historian and author.[1][2]
Born in London on 9 January 1917, she was the second daughter of American diplomat Edward Bell (1882–1924) and his second wife, English heiress Etelka Bertha (née Surtees) Bell, whom Virginia did not like.[3] Her elder sister, Evangeline, later married the American diplomat David K. E. Bruce. Her father, who was involved in the reception in 1917 of the Zimmermann telegram, died in Peking while serving as the acting British Minister to China (when Minister Jacob Gould Schurman was back in Washington) in 1924.[4] After the death of her father in 1924, her mother remarried to Sir James Leishman Dodds, a British career diplomat who served as the British Minister to Bolivia, Cuba and the Ambassador to Peru.[5] From her mother's second marriage, she had a younger half-sister, Josephine Leishman Dodds,[6] who married Squadron Leader Hugh Glyn Laurence Arthur Brooking, the King's Messenger, in 1949.[7]
On June 15, 1937, Virginia Bell married the diplomat Henry Ashley Clarke in Tokyo. Clarke was a son of Dr. and Mrs. H. H. R. Clarke of Kent.[13] During their marriage, he was posted to Lisbon and Paris, before he was knighted KCMG in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1952,[14] and in 1953 became the British Ambassador to Italy in Rome.[15] In 1956, she met David Craig, the general manager in Italy for the British European Airways and began an affair which led to Lady Clarke divorcing Sir Ashley in 1960. She remarried to Craig, but the marriage ended after two years.[12]
Virginia Surtees spend the last years of her life in a Pimlico nursing home. She turned 100 in January 2017, but her health was poor by this point, and biographer Richard Dorment described her as "tired of living"; she eventually chose to stop eating and died on 22 September 2017.[3] She was buried at Mainsforth.[3]
Selected publications
Paintings and Drawings of Dante Gabriel Rossetti: A Catalogue Raisonne - 2 vols. (pub. Oxford University Press, 1971)
Sublime & Instructive: Letters From John Ruskin To Louisa, Marchioness Of Waterford, Anna Blunden And Ellen Heaton - editor (Michael Joseph, 1972)
Charlotte Canning: Lady in Waiting to Queen Victoria and Wife of the first Viceroy of India, 1817-61 (John Murray, 1975)
A Beckford Inheritance: The Lady Lincoln Scandal (Michael Russell, 1977)
Reflections of a Friendship: John Ruskin's Letters to Pauline Trevelyan, 1848-1866 - editor (George Allen & Unwin, 1979)
The Diaries of George Price Boyce - editor (Real World, 1980)
The Diary of Ford Madox Brown - editor (Yale University Press, 1981)
The Ludovisi Goddess: Life of Louisa, Lady Ashburton (Michael Russell, 1984)
Jane Welsh Carlyle (Michael Russell, 1986)
Artist and the Autocrat: George and Rosalind Howard, Earl and Countess of Carlisle (Michael Russell, 1988)
A Second Self: Letters of Harriet Granville, 1810-45 - editor (Michael Russell, 1990)
Rossetti's Portraits of Elizabeth Siddal: A Catalogue of the Drawings and Watercolours (Scolar Press, 1991)
Coutts Lindsay, 1824-1913 (Michael Russell, 1993)
The Grace of Friendship: Horace Walpole and the Misses Berry - editor (Michael Russell, 1995)
The Actress and the Brewer's Wife. Two Victorian Vignettes (Michael Russell, 1997)
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