The Englishwoman in America<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
Following her return to England and her father\u2019s death in 1858,
Bird moved to Edinburgh with her mother and sister. As well as several
shorter trips to the Americas, Bird made several journeys to the Outer
Hebrides during this period, writing articles on the plight of the
crofters there. She used some of the royalties from these articles to
help crofters emigrate to the US.<\/p>\n
1868 saw the death of Bird\u2019s mother, and her sister\u2019s
settling on the Isle of Mull. Loathing the quiet domestic lifestyle
there, and finding it brought back her childhood illnesses, Bird
planned a longer series of voyages. She set out first for Australia,
and then in 1872 to Hawaii. There she climbed an active volcano and
penned her next book. The money from that funded her travels on to
Colorado, the most recent state to have joined the US. Her time in
Colorado prompted another book,
A Lady\u2019s Life in the Rocky Mountains<\/strong>, perhaps her
best known work. Her adventures there were rather awesome, reading
like the treatment for a movie. She befriended a charismatic
one-eyed outlaw, Jim Nugent, a fan of poetry and casual violence.
With his help she climbed Long\u2019s Peak and explored the Rockies.
Bird caused some controversy by dressing in a sensible manner for
her travels here, and riding astride instead of side-saddle, which
ultimately lead to her threatening to sue the
Times<\/strong> for accusing her of dressing ‘like a
man’.<\/p>\n
Her return to England after the trip followed the same pattern
as before. Horrified by the idea of a quiet home life, and with
an offer of marriage from Edinburgh-based doctor John Bishop,
she once again arranged for a journey abroad. This time she
voyaged around East Asia, writing about her experiences in Japan
and Malaysia amongst others. Her trip was cut short by the loss
of her sister to typhoid in 1880, leaving Bird devastated. She
agreed to marry Bishop but found the experience miserable, and
began travelling again when he died in 1886.<\/p>\n
This time around, Bird decided she needed to do some good on her
travels, and chose to travel to India as a missionary. Aged
almost 60, she studied medicine, and arrived on the
sub-continent in 1889. She roamed the area, visiting Tibet,
Persia and Baghdad, taking with her a medicine chest and a
revolver. (After all, you never know when it might be necessary
to heal someone or shoot them.) She also established not one but
two hospitals; the Henrietta Bird Hospital in Amritsar and the
John Bishop Memorial Hospital in Srinigar. This is two more
hospitals than most people ever get round to founding, and a
pretty brilliant achievement.<\/p>\n
Chilling out on a horse in Tibet, as
you do.<\/p><\/div>\n
Her journeys and writing had earned Bird a deal of fame in
England, and in 1892 she became the first woman to be granted a
fellowship with the prestigious Royal Geographic Society
(presided over at the time by the fantastically named Sir
Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff). She met with Prime Minister
William Gladstone and addressed a parliamentary committee to
discuss the atrocities being committed against Armenian people
in the Middle East at the time. Of course, this wasn\u2019t
enough to sate her desire for travel and shortly afterwards she
once again set off around the world.<\/p>\n
She travelled to East Asia again, seeing the Yokohama region of
Japan and much of Korea, leaving only when forced to by the
outbreak of the Sino-Japanese war. Rather than return home, she
moved on to China. There, in addition to travelling up the
Yangtze River and writing more, she was attacked by a mob and
trapped in the top floor of a building that was then set on
fire. Later she was stoned and left unconscious in the street.
That\u2019s the sort of thing that might put a lot of people off
travelling, but when she died in 1904 Bird had been in the
middle of planning another trip to China, due to set off just
after her 73rd birthday in October. Because no one as awesome as
Bird lets a little mob violence deter them from going where they
want to go.<\/p>\n
By the time of her death, Bird had circumnavigated the globe
three times over, written over a dozen books and countless
articles, and established herself as one of the most daring and
best known travellers of the era. Many of her works can be found
on Project Gutenberg here<\/a>,
all of them excellent reads. Pat Barr provides a detailed
biography of her in A Curious Life for a Lady<\/strong><\/a>. <\/p>\n
\u201cHer work was both intimate and informative,
combining personal insight and scientific knowledge of her
destinations to provide the reader with an engaging,
educational account of her travels. Among other themes,
[Bird] wrote to challenge Western stereotypes of Eastern
cultures, to critique the treatment of women in lower
classes.\u201d <\/p>\n
– Laura
Gage<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n