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Hilda Leyel



Hilda Leyel (neé Wauton) (6 December 1880 - 15 April 1957), who wrote under the name Mrs. C. F. Leyel, was an expert on herbalism and founded the Society of Herbalists (later the Herb Society)[1] in England in 1927, as well as a chain of herbalist stores called the "Culpeper Shops". She is author of a book on the subject called Elixirs of Life.[2] among other works on the subject, as well as the cookery book The Gentle Art of Cookery. [3] She was a fellow of the Royal Institution, and an officer of l'Academie Francaise.

She was born in London and educated at Uppingham School where her father Edward Wauton was a teacher. While still young, she developed a precocious interest in herbs and flowers and after leaving school studied medicine. She worked briefly with Frank Benson who was an actor-manager and in 1900 married Carl Frederick Leyel (d.1925), a theatrical manager with whom she had two sons. They later divorced. As a young woman in Lincoln’s Inn, she developed an interest in food and wine and made influential friends, who rallied to her support in 1922 when she was prosecuted for running the Golden Ballot which raised money for ex-servicemen and various hospitals. Her acquittal helped to establish the legality of such ballots. She was elected a life governor of St Mary’s, the West London, and the Royal National Orthopaedic hospitals.

Leyel became very interested in herbalism and with her academic training in botany, she studied the work of the herbalist Nicholas Culpeper and others. She wrote The Magic of Herbs in 1926 and in 1927 she opened Culpeper House on Baker Street, a shop selling herbal medicines, food and cosmetics which were very successful especially with women. She founded the Society of Herbalists, a non-profit organization, for the study and application of herbalism. In 1941 the life of the society was threatened by the Pharmacy and Medicines Bill which would have destroyed the work of the herbalist in England. Influential friends rallied to her support and the bill was modified to enable patients to obtain treatment on joining the society. She also joined Sir Albert Howard in his campaign for compost versus synthetic fertilizers and those working for pure water and food.

In 1931 Leyel edited Mrs M Grieve’s A Modern Herbal in two volumes. She herself wrote a long series of works on herbs, including Herbal Delights (1937), Compassionate Herbs (1946), Elixirs of Life (1948), Hearts-Ease (1949), Green Medicine (1952), and Cinquefoil (1957), as well as others on cooking. She received the Palmes académiques of France in 1924. She died in the Harley Street Nursing Home in London on 15 April 1957.

References

  1. ^ The Herb Society's official website
  2. ^ Mrs. C.F.Leyel - Elixirs of Life - Kegan Paul (2002) ISBN 0-7103-0742-X
  3. ^ Leyel, H. and Hartley, O. - The Gentle Art of Cookery - Kegan Paul (2003) ISBN 0-7103-0915-5
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hilda_Leyel". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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