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Rhoda Dolores Le Poer Power (29 May 1890 in
Altrincham Altrincham ( , locally ) is a market town in Trafford, Greater Manchester, England, south of the River Mersey. It is southwest of Manchester city centre, southwest of Sale and east of Warrington. At the 2011 Census, it had a population o ...
,
Cheshire Cheshire ( ) is a ceremonial and historic county in North West England, bordered by Wales to the west, Merseyside and Greater Manchester to the north, Derbyshire to the east, and Staffordshire and Shropshire to the south. Cheshire's county tow ...
– 9 March 1957 in London), was a pioneer English broadcaster and children's writer. The highly regarded set of stories that make up ''Redcap Runs Away'' (1952) are set in the Middle Ages and told by a runaway minstrel boy.


Life and career

The daughter of Philip Ernest Le Poer Power (born 1860), a stockbroker, and Mabel Grindley, née Clegg (1866–1903), Rhoda Power and her sisters Eileen (1889–1940), who became a historian, and
Beryl Beryl ( ) is a mineral composed of beryllium aluminium silicate with the chemical formula Be3Al2Si6O18. Well-known varieties of beryl include emerald and aquamarine. Naturally occurring, hexagonal crystals of beryl can be up to several met ...
(1891–1974), who joined the civil service, were raised by their maternal grandfather and three aunts, after their father was convicted of fraud in 1891 and he went to prison for five years. She never saw him again and he went to prison again in 1905. Her mother died in 1903. Rhoda Power attended Oxford High School, run by the Girls' Public Day School Trust. She then read modern languages, economics and political economy at St. Andrews University in Scotland (1911–1913).Girton College Archive, Cambridge, UK, Personal Papers of Rhoda Power, GCPP Power, R

Retrieved 24 April 2010.
After a year in the United States, Power worked as a freelance journalist in several European countries. In 1917, she became governess to the daughter of a business family in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, where she became caught up in the
October Revolution The October Revolution,. officially known as the Great October Socialist Revolution. in the Soviet Union, also known as the Bolshevik Revolution, was a revolution in Russia led by the Bolshevik Party of Vladimir Lenin that was a key moment ...
. An illness she caught there may have triggered the progressive deafness from which she began to suffer. Power started to write history books for children in the 1920s, with her sister Eileen and later independently. In 1927 she began a career as a broadcaster with the
BBC #REDIRECT BBC Here i going to introduce about the best teacher of my life b BALAJI sir. He is the precious gift that I got befor 2yrs . How has helped and thought all the concept and made my success in the 10th board exam. ...
. She moved with the school broadcasting department to
Bristol Bristol () is a city, ceremonial county and unitary authority in England. Situated on the River Avon, it is bordered by the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire to the north and Somerset to the south. Bristol is the most populous city in ...
in 1939 and worked there for the rest of her life, apart from a year spent travelling in the Americas in 1946–1947. In 1950 she was awarded an MBE for her work.


''Redcap Runs Away''

Power's book of stories ''Redcap Runs Away'', illustrated by C. Walter Hodges, has become a children's classic, although one in danger of being forgotten today. It tells the story of a 10-year-old boy who takes up with a band of
minstrels A minstrel was an entertainer, initially in medieval Europe. It originally described any type of entertainer such as a musician, juggler, acrobat, singer or fool; later, from the sixteenth century, it came to mean a specialist entertainer w ...
in the 14th century. As an anonymous reviewer in the Melbourne newspaper '' The Age'' put it in 1957, Redcap's adventures make "a peg on which to hang the stories the people used to hear in the market places and inns 600 years ago.... Miss Power has collected them from authentic sources and they still make very good reading." The book joined the prominent UK Puffin Story Books list in that year, as a selection of Eleanor Graham, the senior series editor. Writing in the Puffin fan magazine ''Junior Bookshelf'' for 1952–1953, Graham wrote, "I have only praise and the highest praise" for the book, which "stands head and shoulders above its contemporaries." It was "a story which, if I am not mistaken, will set a new standard for us in children's stories." The delineation of the characters and plot drew upon Rhoda's experience in schools' broadcasting, in which her forte was the dramatization of history for younger listeners. Her grasp of the social history of medieval England owes much to her older sister, the historian Eileen Power, who before her early death in 1940 had collaborated with Rhoda in preparing scripts for broadcasting on the BBC. Among these had been a story about life in a medieval village, told from the standpoint of Simon, a serf who had fled from a nearby manor. This story may have suggested the framework for ''Redcap Runs Away''. However, English literary concern with minstrelsy has been continual since the
Romantic period Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century, and in most areas was at its peak in the approximate ...
: poems such as Sir Walter Scott's '' The Lay of the Last Minstrel'' (1805) and John Clare's ''The Village Minstrel'' (1821), and novels like
Helen Craik Helen Craik (c. 1751 – 11 June 1825) was a Scottish poet and novelist, and a correspondent of Robert Burns. She praised him for being a "native genius, gay, unique and strong" in an introductory poem to his Glenriddell Manuscripts. Early life ...
's ''Henry of Northumberland'' (1800), Sydney Owenson's ''The Novice of St. Dominick'' (a girl flees disguised as a minstrel, 1805), and more recently, Christabel Rose Coleridge's ''Minstrel Dick'' (a boy minstrel becomes a courtier, 1891) and
Howard Spring Howard Spring (10 February 1889 – 3 May 1965) was a Welsh author and journalist who wrote in English. He began his writing career as a journalist but from 1934 produced a series of best-selling novels for adults and children. The most su ...
's ''Darkie and Co.'' (a boy runs away from an unhappy home to join a travelling show, 1932). The inclusion of so many minstrel stories in ''Redcap'' adds to the book's authenticity, but not all US critics at the time viewed this favourably. Commenting on the 1954 US edition, ''The Bulletin of the Children's Book Center'' wrote that "because of the many stories which have been included (one to each chapter) the plot moves slowly, and reading is further hampered by the extremely poor format, with its small type, crowded lines, and poor paper."


Partial bibliography

Several other books in the "Twins" series of introductions to foreign countries were written by others and introduced by Rhoda Power.Sources: LibraryThing, Book Finder, British Library Integrated Catalogue.


Further reading

*Anne Pimlott Baker "Power, Rhoda Dolores Le Poer (1890–1957)", in ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:'' published September 2004, 930 words

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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Power, Rhoda 1890 births 1957 deaths 19th-century English people British broadcasters Children's non-fiction writers English children's writers English radio presenters English women writers British women children's writers Alumni of the University of St Andrews People educated at Oxford High School, England British women historians British radio presenters British women radio presenters Writers of historical fiction set in the Middle Ages