Helen Brotherton

Helen Alice Jane Brotherton, CBE BEM (9 February 1914 — 6 August 2009) was an English conservationist. She was founder of the Dorset Wildlife Trust.

Helen Brotherton (fair use pic) taken from a photo with David Attenborough in 1985

Early life and education

Helen Brotherton was born at Harscott in Lincolnshire, and raised at Leamington Spa, the daughter of Eric and Helen Jakeman Brotherton. She trained as a teacher at Roehampton.[1]

Brownsea Island Sign

Career

Her first teaching job was at Norwich High School for Girls. During World War II, she joined the Women's Voluntary Service, and eventually ran the Sick Bays in Warwickshire, for which she received the British Empire Medal in 1943. She moved to Poole, Dorset, after the war, to care for her aging mother. An avid birdwatcher, she volunteered with the Dorset Field Ornithology Group, and through that group came to know the specific environmental issues in Dorset. She sailed her own boat to Brownsea Island for explorations, against the ban on public access, issued and enforced by the island's reclusive owner, Mary Bonham-Christie.[2] In the early 1960s, after Bonham-Christie's death, Brotherton organized a group to oppose development on Brownsea Island, because the planned development would threaten a wading birds habitat. Because of her group's efforts, the National Trust took ownership of Brownsea, and the group developed into the Dorset Wildlife Trust.[3] Helen Brotherton was the Trust's first and longtime secretary. In 1963, she was awarded an OBE for her environmental work.[4]

Brotherton worked with the coastal protection project "Operation Neptune" as the National Trust's regional representative in Wessex. In 1984, she was appointed a CBE for this activism. She founded the Portland Bird Observatory, was a trustee of the Chesil and Fleet Trust. In 1992, she received the Christopher Cadbury medal from the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts, and in 2007 she won the Octavia Hill medal for her lifetime achievements in environmental conservation.[5]

Personal life and legacy

As a side interest, Helen Brotherton contributed funds to the Salisbury Diocesan Guild of Ringers, to purchase bells in memory of her brother, Roderic Brotherton, who died in World War II.[6]

Helen Brotherton died in 2009, aged 95 years, at Poole Hospital.[7] At the time of her death, the Dorset Wildlife Trust had over 25,000 members.[8]

The Dorset Wildlife Trust presents a Helen Brotherton Award for Volunteering, begun in 2008 and named in her honor.[5] In 2013, the Bishop of Salisbury dedicated a memorial to Helen Brotherton, in St. Mary's Church on Brownsea Island.[9]

gollark: Is that a problem?
gollark: Hmm, at 10W of power utilization and 70 megaprayers per second, it's only 140 nanojoules per prayer.
gollark: But I doubt people use the entire processing capacity of their brain for prayers, given that a lot does vision processing and muscle control and whatever.
gollark: How much energy do people usually pray with? IIRC human brains run on something like 20W.
gollark: Yes.

References

  1. Michael J. Allen, "Brotherton, Helen Alice Jane (1914–2009)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, Jan 2013; online edition, May 2013).
  2. Sophie Campbell, "The Island that was Saved by a Demon" Telegraph Travel (28 July 2007).
  3. Hester Lacey, "Brownsea-Dorset Island Life" Archived 2016-08-26 at the Wayback Machine Kent Life (19 February 2010), Retrieved 24 August 2016
  4. Stephen Moss, "Obituary: Helen Brotherton" The Guardian (30 August 2009).
  5. "Wildlife Champion Passes Away" Dorset Wildlife Trust (6 August 2009).
  6. Salisbury Diocesan Guild of Ringers, Face to Face Newsletter (Autumn 2009): 19.
  7. "Obituary: Helen Brotherton" The Telegraph (21 August 2009).
  8. "Obituary of Miss Helen Brotherton CBE" Dorset Wildlife Trust (12 August 2009).
  9. "Celebrating 50 Years on Brownsea Island" St. Peter's Parkstone (6 June 2013).
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