Photograph of West by Madame Yevonde, 1971 (National Portrait Gallery) |
West opens the letter by indicating the 'strange connections' that bring them together. She had had 'unhappily to take an interest in brucellosis' at the time when she owned a herd of Jersey cows (a significant part of her activities during World War II was maintaining this dairy herd) and thus had read Dalrymple-Champney's writings about the disease, on which he was a significant authority.
Letitia Fairfield during World War II |
In a postscript she claims that, living as she does in a flat in Kensington, 'it is my great sorrow that not possibly could I house a herd - and I can think of nothing lovelier than owning cattle'.
In associated material, besides the papers of Dalrymple-Champneys, the Wellcome Library also holds the papers of West's elder sister, Letitia Fairfield (1885-1978), who had a distinguished career in public health, Senior Medical Officer to the London County Council, 1911-1948, and also as a medical officer during both world wars, in the Queen Mary's Auxiliary Army Corps and the RAF in World War I, and the RAMC in the Second World War, retiring with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. The sisters' relationship has notable tensions: correspondence in the Fairfield files suggests that other family members strongly dissented from West's portrayal of Letitia in her memoir, Family Memories.