Person    | Female  Born 19/1/1925  Died 22/8/2012

Nina Bawden

Categories: Literature, Transport

Writer of novels for adults and children, and late in life, campaigner for railway safety.

Born Nina Mary Mabey in Ilford, Essex. As a child she was evacuated during the blitz, giving her memories which informed her 1975 novel Carrie's War.  She went up to Oxford, Somerville College where she knew Margaret Roberts the future Mrs Thatcher. Married to Harry Bawden for 8 years with whom she had 2 sons. She met Austen Kark, future Head of the BBC World Service, on the top of a bus in 1953. They married and in 1979 moved to Islington. They had one daughter, Perdita.

In her life she suffered three serious blows: the suicide of her son Nicky (or Niki, depending on source) in 1981; and then the death of her husband in the 2002 Potters Bar train crash; and much later the death of her daughter.

In 2002 Nina and Austen were traveling to Cambridge together. In the crash she suffered multiple broken bones but Austen was killed. Against many expectations she survived and after much surgery returned home, able to walk. She fought against corporate might to get liability accepted and compensation paid to her and the other survivors.

Bawden died in her Islington home, pre-deceased by Perdita, by a few months.

Spitalfields Life knew Bawden personally and that article is very sensitive and informative.

Wikipedia lists 55 books, of which we've read a few and look forward to reading more.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Nina Bawden

Commemorated ati

Nina Bawden

Nina Bawden, CBE, 1925 - 2012, writer and campaigner for railway safety, live...

Read More

Other Subjects

W. Somerset Maugham

W. Somerset Maugham

Playwright, novelist and short story writer. Born of British parents in Paris, in the maternity ward set up within the British embassy. This arrangement enabled babies to be born without becoming F...

Person, Literature, France

2 memorials
Doves Press

Doves Press

See Doves Bindery.  Our picture shows the only remaining piece of the Doves type, or did until 2015, when some more was retrieved - see Doves Bindery.

Place, Literature

2 memorials
Anne Brontë

Anne Brontë

Novelist and poet.  Born Yorkshire.  Youngest member of the Bonte literary family.  Novels: 'Agnes Grey', 'Tenant of Wildfell Hall'.  See Charlotte Brontë for more.

Person, Literature

1 memorial
James Hadley Chase

James Hadley Chase

Thriller writer. Born at the site of the plaque as René Lodge Brabazon Raymond. Under various pseudonyms, he wrote ninety novels, fifty of which were made into films. Died in Corseaux-sur-Vevey, Sw...

Person, Literature, Switzerland

1 memorial
Booker Prize

Booker Prize

Literary award. Originally known as the Booker–McConnell Prize, after the company Booker, McConnell Ltd who first sponsored the event. When administration of the prize was transferred to the Booker...

Media, Benefactor, Literature

1 memorial

Previously viewed

East Street Market

East Street Market

There has been street trading in this area since the sixteenth century. The current market specialises in African and Caribbean fruit and vegetables and household goods. East Street was, possibly, ...

Place, Commerce

1 memorial