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Mary Creighton Bailey | |
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![]() Mary Creighton Bailey, c. 1980 | |
| Born | 19 September 1913 Headington, Oxford, England |
| Died | 16 August 2008 (aged 94) Aldbourne, Wiltshire, England |
| Alma mater | Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 1939–1974 |
Mary Creighton Bailey (19 September 1913 – 16 August 2008) was an English classics scholar and teacher, and headmistress of Simon Langton Girls' Grammar School, Canterbury, for fourteen years.
After the Second World War, and interrupting her teaching career, Bailey was flown into Berlin as advisor to the British high commissioner there, with a remit to improve education services. As religious affairs officer in Berlin, she worked with the Evangelical Church of Westphalia. For her work in Germany she was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz 1. Klasse, or Order of Merit First Class of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Bailey belonged to a family of Oxford academics, including Mandell Creighton, Louise Creighton, Cyril Bailey and Sir Walter Leaf.

Bailey was a member of a family of Oxford academics. Her paternal grandfather was barrister Alfred Bailey, a Stowell civil law fellow of University College, Oxford.[1] Her maternal grandfather was Mandell Creighton, a fellow of Merton College, Oxford.[2] Her maternal grandmother was Louise Creighton,[nb 1] who was an alumnus of the University of London and a governor of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.[3][4] Bailey's father was the Oxford don and classicist Cyril Bailey, and her cousin was the classical scholar Sir Walter Leaf.[1][5][nb 2] Her mother was Gemma Creighton,[6][nb 3] who was a daughter of Bishop of London Mandell Creighton, and an alumnus and historian of Lady Margaret Hall.[1] Her parents married in January 1912, at the Chapel Royal, Hampton Court Palace, where Louise Creighton had an apartment.[7][8]
Bailey was born on 19 September 1913, in Headington, Oxford.[9][10][nb 4] She was the eldest of four siblings, which included Balliol student John Mandell Bailey,[11][nb 5] author Rachel Margaret Moss née Bailey, wife of Reverend Basil Moss,[9][nb 6] and Susan Bailey.[4][nb 7] The siblings were "brought up in an intellectually rigorous atmosphere".[4] She attended the Dragon Preparatory School for Boys, with her siblings.[4] She studied greats and gained her Master of Arts (M.A.) at Lady Margaret Hall,[5] where her father was chairman of the college council and an honorary fellow.[1][12]
Bailey died on 16 August 2008 aged 94 years, at Aldbourne Nursing Home, Aldbourne, Wiltshire.[13] She bequeathed to Lady Margaret Hall the above watercolour painting by Bertha Johnson of her maternal grandmother Louise Creighton.[14]
Bailey's first academic position was the teaching of classics at Roedean School in Sussex. The school was evacuated to Keswick, Cumbria, during the Second World War.[5][10][15]

By 1945 Bailey was living in Berlin.[15][16] She was "the first woman to be flown into Berlin after the 2nd World War with the remit to improve education services in Germany".[17] She was an adviser to the British high commissioner in Germany, Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick,[5] and was also the religious affairs officer for Berlin, for the Central Commission for Germany.[18] There are letters from Bailey in the archives of the Evangelical Church of Westphalia.[19] In 1952 she received the award Bundesverdienstkreuz 1. Klasse, or Order of Merit First Class of the Federal Republic of Germany.[5]
[It was] the only Federal decoration of Germany and only awarded to a tiny minority of women since its inauguration in 1951, ‘’for achievements that served the rebuilding of the country in the fields of political, socio-economic and intellectual activity’’[5]
After Bailey's return from Germany, she taught classics in Bristol from 1953.[15][nb 8]

Between 1960 and her retirement in 1974, Bailey was the fifth headmistress of Simon Langton Girls' Grammar School, Canterbury. On her watch, there were schemes for "branching out", "individualism", and "innovation and progress". This involved the inclusion of the school in The Nuffield Science Project which meant building a new biology laboratory, digging a pond, the formation of a natural history society and some weighty text books. She introduced history projects, geography field work abroad, a modern languages oral programme, and the introduction of sociology, politics, General Studies, and economics as school subjects, besides options to mix the sciences and the arts as sixth form subjects, and new facilities for sixth-form study and socialising.[5]
Bailey encouraged concerts and plays,[5] and, following the 1964 retirement of Miss H. L. White,[20][nb 9] hired a full-time music teacher. She began plans for a new music block at the school, which was completed in 1980 and opened by her after her retirement. She expanded the scope of physical education with the opening of a swimming pool in 1964, and foreign school trips became frequent, with groups travelling in Europe and as far as Russia. When she retired, and in accordance with a trend of the era, she insisted that the job would be offered to both men and women, and indeed a headmaster was chosen. "Individuals mattered to her – saint or sinner – and individuality was respected. Her breadth of vision, humanity and integrity sprang from her deeply held beliefs".[5]
Between 1967 and 1968, Bailey was president of the Canterbury branch of the Soroptimists.[17]
245. Chreighton Louise Hume, Hampton Court Palace
Father Cyril Bailey not present. Gemma Bailey age 33 (mother). Mary Creighton Bailey age 7 yrs 9 mths. John Mandell Bailey 5 yrs 10 mths (brother), Rachel Margaret Bailey 1 yr 5 mths (sister), and three servants.
Bailey, Mary C., born 19 Sept '13., single, schoolmistress
Miss M.C. Bailey, former religious affairs officer for Berlin
Contains correspondence with Miss M C Bailey (Wahnerheide)
Media related to Mary Creighton Bailey at Wikimedia Commons