Mea Allan
British writer
Intro | British writer | |
A.K.A. | Mary Eleanor Allan | |
A.K.A. | Mary Eleanor Allan | |
Places | United Kingdom Great Britain | |
was | Journalist | |
Work field | Journalism | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 23 June 1909 | |
Death | 29 August 1982 (aged 73 years) | |
Star sign | Cancer |
Mea Allan (named at birth as Mary Eleanor Allan on 23 June 1909 Bearsden, Scotland – 29 August 1982 Walberswick, Suffolk, England) was a journalist, who worked for the Glasgow Herald. She was the first female war correspondent accredited by the British military and the first female news editor on Fleet Street, and is thus considered a pioneer in this field. Her novel Change of Heart, written in 1943, is about an alternate history (then future) in which the Allies win World War II, but are threatened by a resurgent Nazism. In 1967 she was awarded the Leverhulme Research Scholarship to write a work on the botanists William Hooker and Joseph Dalton Hooker.