Mollie Gillen

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Mollie Gillen
Born Kathleen Mollie Wollnough
1908 (1908)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Occupation Historian, writer, author

Mollie Gillen (née Woolnough; 1908–2009) was an Australian historian, researcher, writer and novelist. Her work on the First Fleet, in The search for John Small, First Fleeter[1] and The Founders of Australia: A Biographical Dictionary of the First Fleet,[2] explored the idea that many of the founding families of Australia were descended from the convict population, rather than those sent to guard them. Gillen's article Maud Montgomery: The Girl Who Wrote Green Gables[3][4] instigated a new era in scholarship on Lucy Maud Montgomery.[5]

History

Mollie Gillen was born Mollie Woolnough in Sydney, New South Wales in Australia, the daughter of Dr. R. E. Woolnough and Bertha Grace Woolnough (née Youdale) in 1908.

At the age of 10, her parents died within a few months of each other: her father who was a medical doctor died from the epidemic of influenza due to tending many patients after WWI. Mollie grew up under the care of her grandparents. She graduated with a bachelor of arts from Sydney University in 1930.

She met her future husband, then a Canadian stationed in England, while working in London in the 1930s, and they moved to Canada after World War II.

Her writing career started in the 1950s. As a federal government information officer in Ottawa, she edited government journals. She was also active on the executive of the University Women's Club of Ottawa, becoming as first vice-president.

Mollie's first mystery novel, Star of Death, was published in England in 1960. Also her many short stories were published in various publications including The Sunday Evening Post.

In 1961, she moved to Toronto and eventually became associate editor and staff writer for the Canadian magazine Chatelaine.[3] Mollie published numerous articles for this women's magazine, concerning on social problems in the community.

Her research led her to write and publish many books on various topics important to Canada and Australia including: The Masseys: Founding Family (1965), The Prince and His Lady (1970), The Assassination of the Prime Minister (1972), The Wheel of Things: A Biography of L.M. Montgomery (1975), The Search for John Small (1985) and The Founders of Australia: A Biographical Dictionary of the First Fleet (1989).

In 1995, she received Hon.D. Litt. from her alma mater for her work on the First Fleet and the history of early Australia, and she also received the Order of Australia for her enormous contributions to her home country.[6]

Later life

Dr. Gillen liven in Dolphin Square in London for many years before moving back to Toronto, Canada. Dr. Gillen lived in a nursing home in Toronto, Ontario until her death January 31, 2009.[7]

Publications

  • Star of Death (1960) - A thriller set in England and Australia.
  • The Masseys: Founding Family (1965) - Enlarged from the three part series that won the President's Medal of the University of Western Ontario for the best article published in Canada in 1965 in the general article category.
  • The Prince and His Lady (1970) - Published in England, Canada and the USA. It is the story of Prince Edward Augustus, later Duke of Kent and father of Queen Victoria, and his relationship with French mistress Madame de St Laurent. Dr.Gillen received Her Majesty the Queen's gracious permission to work in the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle.
  • Assassination of the Prime Minister: The Shocking Death of Spencer Perceval (1972) - An account of the murder in the House of Commons of the British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval in 1812. Dr.Gillen researched and used many original letters and papers in the British Library for writing this book.
  • The Wheel of Things: A Biography of L.M. Montgomery (1975) One of the best biographies of L.M. Montgomery. Dr.Gillen discovered over 40 of Montgomery's letters to her pen-friend George Boyd MacMillan in Scotland and used them as the basis for her work. The letters were later published by Elizabeth Epperly and Francis W.P.Bolger.
  • Royal Duke : Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex (1773-1843) (1976)
  • The search for John Small, First Fleeter (1985) - A study of her an early Australian convict settler.
  • The Founders of Australia: A Biographical Dictionary of the First Fleet (1989) - This is the seminal work on the first fleet that led to her honorary doctorate and being awarded the Order of Australia.

References

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  6. http://www.usyd.edu.au/senate/committees/advisoryKMGillen.shtml
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External links