Valerie Pearl

Valerie Louise Pearl (née Bence; 31 December 1926–20 January 2016)[1] was an historian, noted for her work on the English Civil War. She was the second President of New Hall, Cambridge.

Life

Pearl was the daughter of Cyril Bence, the former Labour Party Member of Parliament for East Dunbartonshire.[2] She was educated at St Anne's College, Oxford, going up in 1946 and gaining a Second-Class degree in Modern History.[3] She subsequently gained a D.Phil. for her thesis, supervised by Christopher Hill, on London and the outbreak of the Puritan Revolution, 1625–1643. This was published in revised form by the Oxford University Press in 1961.

Between 1965 and 1968, Pearl was a Lecturer in History at Somerville College, Oxford. Having been offered a Fellowship at Somerville provided she resided in Oxford on a full-time basis, she reluctantly moved to University College, London, as Reader in London History, later holding a chair in the same subject. She was actively involved (with H. J. Dyos) in the foundation of the London Journal (a "Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present") in 1975, and served as editor of the first five numbers, until 1977.[4] She served as president of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society in 1980–81.

In 1981 Pearl was appointed as the second President of New Hall, Cambridge, a position she held until 1995.

Personal life

In 1949, Valerie Bence married Morris Pearl, with whom she had a daughter, Sara.

Adam Sisman's biography of Hugh Trevor-Roper mentions her contacts with Trevor-Roper, but does not make explicit their affair in the mid-1960s.

Publications

References

Further reading

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
Dame Rosemary Murray
President of New Hall, Cambridge
19811995
Succeeded by
Anne Lonsdale

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