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Under Fire: The Blitz Diaries of a Volunteer Ambulance Driver

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Marjory Nicol-Smith

19 July 2020Naomi Clifford

A series of short biographies of women and men who served as ambulance drivers and assistants in Chelsea, London, during the Second World War.

Marjory Mortada, the “political sculpturess”. (c) Daily Mirror 29 April 1970.

It is difficult to make out what Marjory Nicol-Smith (or Mrs Marjory Mortada) is holding up to her right in this picture grabbed from the Daily Mirror of 28 April 1970, and you may be surprised to learn that it is her impression of the philosopher and anti-nuclear protestor Bertrand Russell during his Great Sit Down outside the Ministry of Defence in 1951. The caption says that Mortada is a “political sculptress” and that the Hilton Gallery was showing her work and that she had shown her work at the Royal Academy.

In 1939, Marjory, aged 26, was listed as living at 26 Old Church Street with her sister Sheila and volunteering for the London County Council ambulance service. She probably worked at AS22 in Danvers Street alongside my diarist June.

She had studied at Gray’s School of Art in her home town of Aberdeen and come to London to work as an artist. She painted murals and did lettering, but her first love was wood carving. She told the Mirror that while she waited for the air raid sirens during the Blitz, she would carve chess pieces: “The kings were always Falstaffian figures. The knights, morris dancers on hobby horses. The pawns were workers carrying hammers and sickles.” Even for the Mirror, Marjory, the daughter of an Army Lieutenant-Colonel, was probably a bit out there, although the furthest they would go was that she was a bit “protesty”.

In 1943 Marjory married Ismail Osman Mortada, the son of an Egypt-born doctor. They went on to have four children (that I know of). She died in 1978. 


Under Fire: The Blitz Diaries of a Volunteer Ambulance Driver

In this collection of essays, Naomi Clifford explores the lives of women whose stories we have forgotten or have never known. Meet Eliza Fenning, a servant whose ability to read proved fatal; teenager Maria Glenn, dragged through the courts by a vengeful would-be suitor; Susanna Meredith, who devoted herself to improving the lives of convicted women; Margaret Larney, pregnant and condemned to death; Mary Ashford, whose woeful end was staged on the opening night of a famous theatre; and French anarchist Louise Michel, welcomed, to the consternation of the great and the good, on a fact-finding visit to a London workhouse. ‘It is rare to find a writer who does their research so thoroughly and then wears their learning so …
Read More

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Comments

  1. Alistair Mortada says

    17 August 2022 at 4:05pm

    I am the oldest of Marjory Mortada’s children and can confirm that the carving is of a seated, protesting Bertrand Russell. My mother was rather taken by the seated young man sitting back to back with him to support him.
    I have ordered ‘Under Fire”and am looking forward to finding out more about the history of that time.
    If there is any information I could provide please let me know.

    Reply

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