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  1. Helen Gladstone (28 August 1849 – 19 August 1925) was a British educationist, vice-principal at Newnham College in Cambridge, and co-founder of the Women's University Settlement.

  2. www.williamgladstone.org.uk › helen-gladstoneHelen Gladstone

    Helen Gladstone (1849–1925) was the youngest child of the British prime minister William Gladstone. She studied at Newnham College, Cambridge and became a pioneer of women's education and social reform.

  3. Helen Jane Gladstone (1814-80) was the youngest daughter of a wealthy Scottish merchant and the sister of the prime minister William Ewart Gladstone. She had a troubled life marked by illness, addiction, conversion to Catholicism and isolation on the Isle of Wight.

  4. Helen Gladstone was the youngest daughter of the Liberal Prime Minister, W.E. Gladstone and his wife Catherine, née Glynne. She came to Newnham as a student in 1877 and stayed on as Principal’s Secretary. Subsequently she became Vice-Principal in charge of the Hall that is now known as Sidgwick Hall.

  5. Helen Gladstone (1849–1925) was the youngest daughter of Prime Minister W. E. Gladstone. She came to Newnham as a student in 1877 and stayed on as Principal’s Secretary and then Vice-Principal of Sidgwick Hall.

  6. Helen's conversion to Roman Catholicism was a personal and political blow. The Gladstones’ life stories illustrate life-chances, emotional and psychic development in the context of gender and seniority played out in a particular familial setting.

  7. 4 de abr. de 2003 · The life of Helen Gladstone (1814–80), younger sister of William Ewart Gladstone, the pre-eminent statesman of nineteenth-century Britain, was an unhappy series of rebellions against a Victorian patriarchy that sought to manage her aberrant behaviour by grinding her into submission.