Kate Mangan

Kate Mangan (born Katharine Prideaux Foster and also subsequently known as Kate Kurzke) was born in Sedgely, Staffordshire, in 1904. She was an artist, actress and journalist.

Early life and career

After leaving school, Kate attended the Slade Art School, before moving to Paris where she worked as a fashion model. She was frequently seen in the Café Royal with her admirer, Augustus John, or dining out at the Tour Eiffel.[1] It was also in Paris where she met Sherry Mangan, the Irish American scholar and poet, in 1924. They married in 1931 and separated three years later. She then met a refugee German artist, Jan Kurzke, with whom she travelled to Spain in 1934. She divorced Sherry in 1935.

Following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Jan was one of a group of volunteers went out to Spain to join the International Brigades and fought in defence of Madrid, alongside John Cornford, Bernard Knox and John Sommerfield.[2] Kate followed him out to Spain, working first as a correspondent for the Christian Monitor and later in the Government Press office, reporting to Constancia de la Mora and Luis Rubio Hidalgo.

While she was working in Spain, Kate met a number of leading writers including W.H. Auden, Stephen Spender and Ernest Hemingway;[3] journalists including Lawrence Fernsworth, Hugh Slater, Kitty Bowler and Milly Bennett;[4] photographers including Robert Capa and Gerda Taro;[5] International Brigade volunteers such as Tom Wintringham and Bob Merriman; doctors such as Norman Bethune and nurses such as Patience Darton.[6] After Jan was seriously injured by shrapnel, Kate tracked him down to a hospital in Murcia and managed to get him out of Spain to convalesce with friends in Paris. She then returned to her work in the Press Office in Valencia. Kate and Jan each wrote of their experiences in Spain; their unpublished memoirs are held at the International Institute of Social History (IISH) in Amsterdam under the collective title The Good Comrade.

Personal life

Jan was interned on the Isle of Wight at the outbreak of the Second World War; he and Kate briefly reunited and their daughter, Charlotte Kurzke, was born in 1940. They then went their separate ways, Kate and Charlotte living in a house in Steeles Road, Hampstead. She taught art at a London secondary school and later became an examiner for the Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate. She was a founder member of the Hampstead Arts Council in 1945 and remained an active participant until her death in 1977.[7]

Memoir

The Good Comrade, Memoirs of Kate Mangan and Jan Kurzke, International Institute of Social History (IISH), Amsterdam.[8]

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gollark: Except of the camera.
gollark: I don't see any wobbling on there.
gollark: Sounds like a great business model.

References

  1. The Beautiful Kate Foster (Obituary), Hampstead and Highgate Express, 04Nov1977.
  2. Premature Anti-Fascist, Bernard Knox, The Antioch Review, Vol.57, No. 2, Essays, Personal & Political, Spring 1999, pp.133-149.
  3. Hemingway and the Spanish Civil War: The Distant Sound of Battle, Gilbert H. Muller, Palgrave MacMillan, 2019, p. 58
  4. We Saw Spain Die, Paul Preston, Constable, 2008, pp.131-133
  5. The Mexican Suitcase: The Legendary Spanish Civil War Negatives of Robert Capa, Gerda Taro and David Seymour, Cynthia Young & David Balsells, 2010, p 28.
  6. British Women and the Spanish Civil War, Angela Jackson, Routledge, 2003.
  7. The Beautiful Kate Foster (Obituary), Hampstead and Highgate Express, 04Nov1977.
  8. The Good Comrade, Memoirs of Kate Mangan and Jan Kurzke, International Institute of Social History (IISH), Amsterdam.
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