Constance Smith (civil servant)

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Constance Smith
The Case for Wages Boards tome
Born
Constance Isabella Stuart Smith

16 June, 1859
Died26 March, 1930
England?
Alma materKing's College, London
Occupation(s)Novelist and civil servant

Constance Smith (born as Constance Isabella Stuart Smith) (1859 – 1930) was an English novelist and civil servant who published on working conditions and labour legislation.

Early life[edit]

Smith was born in London on 16 June 1859 to Reverend Hinton C. Smith and educated in Belgium; Germany; and King's College, London.[1][2]

Career[edit]

Between 1889 and 1901, Smith authored nine novels.[3]

From 1913 onwards, Smith served in several capacities as a civil servant inspecting labour conditions for women and children and in factories. She received an OBE for her work.[1] In 1926, she received a Civil Pension 'in recognition of her valuable services in promoting and advancing social welfare.'[4]

Smith published The Case for Wages Boards in 1905 and collaborated with other women social workers including Gertrude Tuckwell, who wrote her memoir.[2]

Administrative titles[edit]

  • HM Senior Lady Inspector of Factories, 1913–21
  • Joint Secretary of Women's Employment Committee (Ministry of Reconstruction), 1917–19
  • HM Deputy Chief Inspector of Factories, 1921–25
  • Technical Adviser to British Government Delegates at First Conference of International Labour Organisation, Washington, 1919, and Fifth Conference, Geneva, 1923
  • Joint Hon. Secretary Committee on Wage-earning Children
  • Member of the Industrial Law Committee
  • Four times a British Delegate to the Biennial Conference of International Association for Labour Legislation[1]

Bibliography[edit]

Fiction[edit]

  • The Repentance of Paul Wentworth (1889)
  • The Riddle of Lawrence Haviland (1890)[5]
  • One Way of Love (1892)
  • A Cumberer of the Ground (1894)[6]
  • The Backslider: A Story of Today (1896)
  • Prisoners of Hope (1898)
  • Love Hath Wings (1899)[7]
  • The Magic Word (1900)
  • Corban (1901)[8]

Non-fiction[edit]

As well as numerous journal and periodical articles, Smith authored:

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Smith, Constance Isabella Stuart, (died 26 March 1930), HM Deputy Chief Inspector of Factories, 1921–25". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540891.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-217219. Retrieved 2024-04-28.
  2. ^ a b Tuckwell, Gertrude M. (1931). Constance Smith: A Short Memoir. Duckworth.
  3. ^ "Author: Constance Isabella Stuart Smith". www.victorianresearch.org. Retrieved 2024-04-28.
  4. ^ Commons, Great Britain Parliament House of (1926). Parliamentary Papers. H.M. Stationery Office.
  5. ^ Smith, Constance Isabella Stuart (1890). The Riddle of Lawrence Haviland. A Novel. R. Bentley & Son.
  6. ^ Smith, Constance (1894). A Cumberer of the Ground. Harper & Brothers.
  7. ^ Smith, Constance (1899). Love Hath Wings. Isbister.
  8. ^ Smith, Constance Isabella Stuart (1901). Corban.
  9. ^ Smith, Constance Isabella Stuart (1908). The Case for Wages Boards. National Anti-Sweating League. ISBN 978-0-7222-1867-9.