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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_GarmanMary Garman - Wikipedia

    Mary Garman. Mary Margaret Garman Campbell (1898–1979) was the eldest of seven sisters known for their glamorous, bohemian lifestyles and their many love affairs with famous artists, writers, and musicians of interwar London.

  2. www.wikiwand.com › en › Mary_GarmanMary Garman - Wikiwand

    Mary Margaret Garman Campbell was the eldest of seven sisters known for their glamorous, bohemian lifestyles and their many love affairs with famous artists, writers, and musicians of interwar London. She was a member of the Bloomsbury Group and the wife of the radical South African poet Roy Campbell, who attacked the group in The Georgiad , a response to his wife's lesbian affair with Vita ...

  3. 22 de jun. de 2021 · You may be surprised to hear that Woolf’s own path would cross with that of a woman from Wednesbury, contributing to the creation of what is, today, considered a landmark and trailblazer of Queer literature: Orlando: A Biography. Mary Garman was born in Wednesbury in 1898.

  4. Following his marriage to bohemian Englishwoman Mary Garman, he wrote the well-received poem The Flaming Terrapin which brought the Campbells into the highest circles of British literature .

    • Poetry
    • Poet, journalist
  5. Mary Margaret Garman was the eldest of the sisters. Along with her sister Kathleen she ran away to London, where they lived in a one-room studio at 13 Regent Square on the edge of Bloomsbury. Mary was married to the penniless South African poet Roy Campbell from 1924 until he was killed in a car crash in Portugal in 1957. [1] Kathleen (1901–1979)

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  7. Primary Sources Mary Garman. Mary Garman, the daughter of Walter Garman, the medical officer for Wednesbury, was born in 1898.Her mother, Margaret Magill, who was nearly twenty years younger than her husband, had eight other children: Sylvia (1899), Kathleen (1901), Douglas (1903), Rosalind (1904), Helen (1906), Mavin (1907), Ruth (1909) and Lorna (1911).