Book description
I have felt the need for a change of scene and interest lately.'
-Lady Bailey on the eve of her London-Cape Town flight, March 1928.
Mary Westenra, born in 1890, was the daughter of Derry Westenra, the
fifth Baron Rossmore of Rossmore Castle, Co. Monaghan, a famous
sportsman and rake. After a youth of much hunting, shooting and
fishing, and little formal education, at the age of twenty she married
Sir Abe Bailey, a South African tycoon of British extraction.
Shuttling between England and South Africa with a much older man whose
interests were very different from hers, and cut off from her beloved
life of horses and hounds, Lady Bailey began to take flying lessons in
secret. With astonishing rapidity, she became one of the world's most
celebrated aviators, before setting out on the journey that would make
her name: London to Cape Town and back. Flying in her De Havilland
Moth, she was detained for several days in Cairo, where the
authorities didn't want to let her continue without a man in the
plane. Eventually she prevailed, and flew down the eastern flank of
the African continent to Cape Town - and then turned back, en route
for London up the western flank of the continent. Lady Bailey's
riveting journal of this return flight has survived and is reproduced
in its entirety here. Lacking a radio, she often lands in unknown
places to ask directions, and recounts in unruffled prose her
encounters with friendly Africans and unhelpful French colonials. Jane
Falloon paints a rich picture of Lady Bailey's life, establishing her
sporting pedigree and detailing the still-feudal environment of
Monaghan in which the Lord's daughter grew up. The remarkable life of
the businessman-imperialist Abe Bailey, who bankrolled his wife's
adventures and always supported her despite a lack of warmth in the
marriage, is also recounted. Lady Bailey herself emerges from this
biography as one of the most remarkable Irishwomen of the century.
Jane Falloon, a graduate of Girton College, Cambridge, was a
professional singer, spending two seasons with Glyndebourne Opera. She
is the author of a children's book, Thumbelina (1997). She lives in Co.
Laois.