Mary Bonham-Christie

Mary Bonham-Christie (23 July 1865 — 28 April 1961) called "the Demon of Brownsea", was the reclusive owner of Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour, Dorset from 1927 until 1961.[1]

Personal life

Mary Florence Whitburn was born in 1865, the daughter of Charles Joseph Sofer Whitburn and Fanny Hales Whitburn, of Addington Park in Kent.[2] She married Robert Bonham Bax Christie in 1889;[3] they had a daughter, Elsie, and sons John and Robert.

Owner of Brownsea Island

Mary Bonham-Christie purchased Brownsea Island at auction in 1927, for £125,000. She ordered the island's 200 residents to leave, and banned hunting and fishing on grounds of animal cruelty. The protracted legal battle that followed may have turned violent with the fire that consumed much of the island in 1934 (the cause of the fire was never determined, though Bonham-Christie blamed the Boy Scouts and forbade them to camp on the island afterwards). Fearing further threats, she hired a bodyguard to eject intruders to the island. While unpopular, her minimal interference with the island's natural contents meant that it became a flourishing habitat for red squirrels,[4] Sandwich tern, avocet, and other wildlife. "The old lady knew she wasn't popular but I don't think she cared," said a former boatman who served the island during her tenure there.[5]

Death and legacy

St. Mary's Church on Brownsea Island

Mary Bonham-Christie died in 1961, aged 95 years, on the day that her family had arranged for her to be moved to a nursing home off the island.[6] Her grandson and heir John Bonham-Christie had plans to develop the island. A group of environmental conservationists, led by Helen Brotherton, organized to oppose his plans. They succeeded in raising sufficient funds to persuade the National Trust to take over the island, while allowing the Bonham Christie family to avoid death duties on the property.[7]

There is a monument to Mary Bonham-Christie in the churchyard at Marston Bigot; her remains were cremated at Bournemouth, and interred at Brownsea Island. In 2007, BBC Radio 4 broadcast a half-hour report about Mary Bonham-Christie, titled "For Nature, Not Humans."[8]

References

  1. Sophie Campbell, "The Island that was Saved by a Demon" Telegraph Travel (28 July 2007).
  2. Bernard Burke, ed., A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain (Harrison & Sons 1898): 1583 for "Whitburn of Addington Park".
  3. Winchester College, 1836-1909: A Register (Winchester College 1907).
  4. "Brownsea Island Squirrels Suffering from Leprosy" Bournemouth Echo (9 May 2016).
  5. Adam Lee-Potter, "The People Who Have Helped Make Brownsea Island the Nation's Favourite Nature Reserve" Dorset (12 March 2014).
  6. "Recluse Dies at 96; Lived Alone in 80 Room Castle" The Bee (1 May 1861): 11. via Newspapers.com
  7. Victoria Ward, "Father and Son Locked in Legal Battle over Trust Fund" The Telegraph (1 August 2013).
  8. Alan Leith, "For Nature, Not Humans" BBC Radio 4 (10 April 2007).
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