The English Folk Dance and Song Society websites use cookies.
You can read more about cookies and how we use them here.
Continued use of this site implies that you agree to our use of cookies.  
i Close

LEB Lucy Broadwood Collection

Use the arrow buttons to open and close levels in the hierarchy.

 
Close

Lucy Broadwood Collection
Lucy Broadwood Manuscript Collection (LEB)

First Line
Performer
Date collected
Place
Collector
Roud No
Show all fields
Alt Ref No
Format
Type
Subtype
Src Contents
Named Tune
Child No
Laws No
Notes

Papers of Lucy Etheldred Broadwood containing music manuscripts, song words, notes, correspondence, printed material, envelopes, journal proofs, newspaper clippings and invoices. Includes material relating to Broadwood's role as Editor of the Folk Song Society Journal between 1904 and 1910 and again after 1914.

Author / Composer
VWML Location
Ann Mason Bay F
Repository
EFDSS Archive
Printer / Publisher
Pub Place
Pub Date
Level
Fonds
Volume
Assoc Source
Date extant
Close Lucy Broadwood

Lucy Etheldred Broadwood (1858-1929)

Lucy Broadwood was born in Scotland, a member of the famous piano-manufacturing family. The family moved to Lyne on the Surrey Sussex Border when Broadwood was a girl. After the death of her father in 1893 she moved to London for the remainder of her life. She was aware of folk music from an early age, her uncle John having published a collection of songs from the Sussex Weald in the 1840s, and began to collect herself in the late 1880s. She helped form the Folk-Song Society in 1898, becoming Secretary from 1904 to 1909 and editing its Journal from 1904 to 1910 and again after 1914. She was elected President of the Society in 1928, the year before her death.

The consequence of Lucy being Secretary of the Folk-Song Society and editor of its Journal is that her manuscript collection became an amalgam of the fieldwork of many collectors, including her own. Roughly one half of the songs included are from the likes of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Anne Gilchrist, Henry Hammond, Ella Leather, Percy Merrick, George Butterworth, Clive Carey, Frank Kidson and Cecil Sharp. Broadwood herself collected from 22 named singers during a 25 year period, including the formidable Henry Burstow in Sussex, from whom Vaughan Williams also noted songs.

Lucy and J.A. Fuller-Maitland produced the influential English County Songs in 1893, which was followed by English Traditional Songs and Carols in 1908 (with Lucy as sole editor). According to an obituary, 'scarcely a number of the Journal has appeared without some valuable contribution from her hand, and many have been almost entirely her own from beginning to end.' She also pioneered the use of the phonograph in collecting songs, the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS) collection of wax cylinders including recordings of songs from the Scottish islands made by Lucy in London in 1908 and 1909. This collection now resides with The British Library's National Sound Archive, digital copies of which are available via the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library (VWML).

The folk music related material in Lucy's papers was donated to the Folk-Song Society in 1931 and now resides with VWML, while her more private papers found their way to the Surrey Record Office in 1977, subsequently removed to the Surrey History Centre in Woking. More recently, her working diaries have been added to the collection in Surrey.

 

Browse the collection

Lucy Broadwood

 

Find out more about these collectors

Search here
Ralph Vaughan Williams

Anne Gilchrist
Henry Hammond
Ella Leather
Percy Merrick
George Butterworth
Clive Carey
Frank Kidson
Cecil Sharp