Beatrice Chase
Beatrice Chase is the pen name for a
British writer, who became well known for her
Dartmoor-based novels during the first half of the
20th century. Her real name was Olive Katharine Parr, and she was directly descended from William Parr, the brother of
Catherine, the sixth wife of
Henry VIII.
She was born in
Harrow,
Middlesex, in
1874, but settled in a cottage on the outskirts of the Dartmoor village of
Widecombe-in-the-Moor. She was often to be seen sitting at her writing desk, beside her favourite window. Here she wrote many novels, including
The Heart of the Moor,
The Ghost of the Moor and the appropriately titled
Through a Dartmoor Window.
Her passion for Dartmoor is evident in her writing, and she often campaigned to protect the landscape from modern developments - such as its use by the
British Army. Indeed, Beatrice Chase was often referred to as 'The Lady of the Moor'.
She died in
1955, and was buried in Widecombe churchyard. The small granite cross on her grave is inscribed with Beatrice Chase on one side and Olive Katharine Parr on the other.