Adelaide Phillpotts


Mary Adelaide Eden Ross was an English novelist, poet and playwright. She married at the age of 55 leaving behind her father who had controlled their incestuous relationship.

Life

Phillpotts was born in Ealing, London and went to a local boarding school and then to Grassendale School in Southbourne, Dorset. Later she studied social care at Bedford College.
As a 12-year-old girl she looked up to her slightly older Torquay neighbour Agatha Miller. Her father, the successful and prolific writer Eden Phillpotts, was impressed enough by Agatha's early work to help her with it, but at that point unsuccessfully. Amongst other literary celebrities who visited the Phillpotts family were Thomas Hardy and Arnold Bennett.
Eden Phillpotts treated his daughter as an extension of himself. Her long-held secret, revealed in an interview in 1976 long after her father had died, was that the relationship had been incestuous. She contrasted his obsessive, controlling "love" for her by saying that she loved him too, but only as a father. However she was compliant to his demands.
Phillpotts was treated cruelly by her father, but he would also write her sonnets. Dayananda notes that she published seven similar books where the lead character is not an ambitious feminist but is instead a woman based in the home. Despite being a sensitive woman, her heroine is beginning to realise that her gender's role may not always be submissive. The books, A Marriage, The Gallant Heart, The Round of Life, Our Little Town, From Jane to John, The Fosterling, Stubborn Earth were published between 1928 and 1951.
In 1938 the three act comedy play, Yellow Sands that she had written with her father in 1926 was made into a film. The film starred Marie Tempest, Belle Chrystall and Wilfrid Lawson.
In 1951, at the age of 55, and strongly against her father's wishes, she married American bookseller Nicholas Ross. From that time on she published under the name Adelaide Ross, and her father cut off all communication with her until his death in 1960.
She died in Poughill near Bude in Cornwall, and is buried in Morwenstow.
The National Portrait Gallery holds two photographs of Phillpotts, both taken in 1926 and donated by Pinewood Studios via the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1989.

Works include