| Arthur Ransome wearing his Press Corps Uniform in WW1 |
Arthur was born on 18th January 1884 in Leeds, UK. He was the son of Cyril Ransome (1851–1897) who was a Professor of History at Yorkshire College (now the University of Leeds). and his wife Edith Ransome (née Baker Boulton) (1862–1944).
Arthur was the eldest of four children - he had two sisters, Cecily and Joyce, and a brother Geoffrey who was killed in the First World War in 1918. Joyce married into the Lupton family, well-connected industrialists and politicians; she named one of her sons Arthur Ralph Ransome Lupton (1924–2009), Her grandson is storyteller Hugh Lupton.
The Ransome family regularly holidayed at Nibthwaite in the Lake District, and Arthur was carried up to the top of Coniston Old Man as an infant.
Educated first in Windermere and then at Rugby School (where he lived in the same study room that had been used by Lewis Carroll) where he did not entirely enjoy the experience, because of his poor eyesight, lack of athletic skill, and limited academic achievement, Arthur went on to study chemistry at Yorkshire College, where his late father had worked. His father's premature death in 1897 had a lasting effect on him.
After a year at Yorkshire College, Arthur abandoned his studies and went to London to become a writer. He took low-paying jobs as an office assistant in a publishing company and as editor of a failing magazine – “Temple Bar Magazine”, while establishing himself as a member of the literary scene.
His mother did not want him to abandon his studies for writing, but was later supportive of his books. She urged him to publish “The Picts and the Martyrs” in 1943, although his second wife Evgenia hated it and was often discouraging about his books while he was writing them.
Arthur married Ivy Constance Walker in 1909 and they had one daughter - Tabitha. It was not a happy marriage as Arthur found his wife's demands to spend less time on writing and more with her and their daughter a great strain; his biographer Hugh Brogan writes that "it was impossible to be a good husband to Ivy". The couple weredivorced in 1924.
In 1913 Ransome left his first wife and daughter and went to Russia to study its folklore..
After the start of the First World War in 1914, Arthur became a foreign correspondent and covered the war on the Eastern Front for “The Daily News”. He also covered the Russian Revolutions of 1917 and came to sympathise with the Bolshevik cause, becoming personally close to a number of its leaders, including Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky and Karl Radek. He met the woman who would later become his second wife - Evgenia Petrovna Shelepina - who worked as Trotsky's personal secretary.
He also wrote about the literary life of London and about Russia before, during and after the Revolutions of 1917. His connection with the leaders of the Revolution led to him providing information to the Secret Intelligence Service, while he was also suspected by MI5 of being a Soviet spy.
In 1915, Arthur published “The Elixir of Life” (published by Methuen, London), which was to be his only full-length novel apart from the “Swallows and Amazons” series. He published “Old Peter's Russian Tales” - a collection of 21 folktales from Russia - the following year
After a long and successful life, Arthur died on 3rd June 1967.