Age, Biography and Wiki
Jacqueline Wheldon is a British author and journalist. She was born in Fulham, West London, and educated at St. Paul's Girls' School. She has written several books, including The Life and Times of a Londoner, The London Scene, and The Londoner's London. She has also written for The Times, The Guardian, The Observer, and The Sunday Times.
Jacqueline Wheldon is 69 years old. She has not shared about She's parent's name. Our team currently working, we will update Family, Sibling, Spouse and Children's information. Right now, we don't have much information about Education Life.
Jacqueline Wheldon's estimated Net Worth, Salary, Income, Cars, Lifestyles & much more details has been updated below. Let's check, How Rich is Jacqueline Wheldon in 2020?
Jacqueline Wheldon's net worth is estimated to be around $1 million. She has earned her wealth through her writing career. She has written several books and articles for various newspapers and magazines. She has also appeared on television and radio shows.
Popular As |
Jacqueline Mary Clarke |
Occupation |
Author |
Age |
69 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Taurus |
Born |
20 May, 1924 |
Birthday |
20 May |
Birthplace |
Clonmel Road, Fulham, West London |
Date of death |
(1993-06-21) |
Died Place |
N/A |
Nationality |
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 20 May.
She is a member of famous Author with the age 69 years old group.
Jacqueline Wheldon Height, Weight & Measurements
At 69 years old, Jacqueline Wheldon height not available right now. We will update Jacqueline Wheldon's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Parents |
Not Available |
Husband |
Not Available |
Sibling |
Not Available |
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Jacqueline Wheldon Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Jacqueline Wheldon worth at the age of 69 years old? Jacqueline Wheldon’s income source is mostly from being a successful Author. She is from . We have estimated
Jacqueline Wheldon's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
Author |
Jacqueline Wheldon Social Network
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Timeline
Her penultimate battle was against the author of her husband's biography. He had discovered, among unsorted papers, letters from Huw Wheldon to his wife of an extremely intimate kind describing sexual fantasies, and had used these, without having informed Wheldon of his discovery, as the foundation of a biography of the broadcaster. Despite widespread disdain for the book among critics, Wheldon felt that she was at fault, that she had betrayed her husband ("inexcusable treachery" was her term), and by this her morale was destroyed. The book was published in 1990. She struggled with attempts to write her own memoir of her husband, but her desire for omniscience hindered her. After three years battling deteriorating health, Wheldon died of cancer on 21 June 1993 at Charing Cross Hospital, Hammersmith, not far from her childhood home. Among her final words were: “I shall have such a lot to write about when I get out of here”. Her ashes joined those of her husband at the base of an unmarked tree in the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew.
Set nominally in London and Korea in the years of the Korean War, it is, it has been said, "about everything", though to Norman Podhoretz she said it was "about running". Wheldon and her mother had been sprinters in their youths. The remark was unhelpful to Podhoretz but her son Wynn has interpreted it as meaning simply "about living to your very utmost limit". Wheldon ceased writing the book on the death of her mother in 1980, and never went back to it. She wrote that she was never more alive than when she was writing.
In 1980, she was asked to become Director of the UK branch of the Committee for the Free World, an organisation of intellectuals unified by a desire to stiffen the sinews of western resistance to communism, to argue against unilateral nuclear disarmament by the West, and to press for the installation of cruise missiles in Western Europe (in response to the communist deployment of SS-20 nuclear missiles in Eastern Europe). Alun Chalfont was the chairman and the committee included intellectuals such as Raymond Aron, Sybille Bedford, Max Beloff, Milovan Djilas, Joachim Fest, and Tom Stoppard. Its activities culminated in the conference 'Beyond 1984', which addressed the continuing threat of communism throughout the world.
"I’m very interested in what God is," she once said, "interested in the idea that God is profound experience". By 1976 she had faith enough to write a prayer for her husband during a dire illness. She equated god and love. One of her characters (in the unpublished Daughters of the Flood) writes that "love makes the heart yearn for eloquence".
Wheldon had begun to contribute articles on television to such journals as Truth and Context, but she had begun to work on a novel that, following the birth of two further children, was to grow by 1964 to well over 400,000 words (she trimmed it to 220,000 for publication). Mrs Bratbe's August Picnic was published in 1965. It earned plaudits from, among others, Richard Church in Country Life ("the most astonishing first novel I have ever read") and Anthony Burgess in The Listener, who called Mrs Bratbe "as outrageous a prodigy as we have had this side of the war". Mrs Bratbe's August Picnic is a retelling of the Oedipus story, with the sexes reversed. Alexandra, daughter of the outrageous media magnate Hytha O. Bratbe, is brought up in France, falls in love (unknowingly) with her father, causes the death of her monstrous mother and blinds herself in remorse. The writing was considered (in The TLS) to owe much to the "shadow" of Iris Murdoch and the "ghosts" of Aldous Huxley and Virginia Woolf. Wheldon in fact looked more to the 'great tradition' for her masters and in particular to Henry James and D. H. Lawrence.
In June 1957 she returned to LSE to resume a PhD on 19th-century political thought, but it was never finished and perhaps hardly truly begun, for by July she was pregnant with her first child.
In 1955, Wheldon applied successfully for a post in the Cabinet Office and was at the same time asked to become an officer in the Joint Intelligence Bureau at the Ministry of Defence. She turned down both positions, probably due to her marriage to the broadcaster Huw Wheldon. They were married at St John's Church, Fulham, on 2 April 1956. It was to be a marriage of intense mutual dependence and uninterrupted loving kindness.
Wheldon gained an Upper Second and left LSE in 1954 to start research at the Nuffield Foundation in Cambridge with Dr Hilde Himmelweit on the book Television and the Child. In Cambridge, she made a number of lifelong friends to whom she was introduced by Norman Podhoretz (whom she had met on a holiday in Greece in 1951, and who later became editor of the American intellectual monthly Commentary), including novelist Dan Jacobson and chemist Aaron Klug (who won the Nobel Prize in 1982). F. R. Leavis still held court at Downing College, and the students of English were in his thrall. Through them, Wheldon was introduced to The Novel. She "read enormously... came alive in a curious kind of way".
She was educated at Carlyle School, Chelsea. When the school was evacuated to Windsor at the beginning of World War II, she absconded back to London several times, by bicycle, and was eventually expelled. Throughout the war she lived in Ealing with her mother, working first for Hoover and then for the local council. She joined the Labour Party and in 1945 was the East Ealing Labour Party delegate to the party conference. In a letter written shortly before her death, she wrote that her life "started with an arrival, inauspicious, at the LSE London School of Economics". Actually she had been discovered by Professor Harold Laski when she asked him to talk at the Ealing branch of the Labour League of Youth. Laski invited her to come and work in the Machine Room as a secretary to the Statistics Department at the LSE for two years, and in 1948 she was admitted to the school.
Jacqueline Mary Wheldon (née Clarke, 20 May 1924 – 21 June 1993), was an English author.
Jacqueline Mary Clarke was born in Clonmel Road, Fulham, West London, the first child and only daughter of Hugh Clarke (1892–1930), a toolmaker, and Lillie Nunns (1890–1980), the daughter of a railway guard, Harry Nunns, and his wife Elizabeth. Her father, whom she remembered despite his death when she was six years old, told her "with absolute certainty" that she would be a writer.