Wendy Greengross
Wendy Greengross | |
---|---|
Born | Golders Green, London, UK | 29 April 1925
Died | 10 October 2012 | (aged 87)
Spouse | Alex Kates |
Children | 5 |
Wendy Elsa Greengross (29 April 1925 – 10 October 2012) was a British general practitioner and broadcaster. The Independent called her "a pioneering counsellor and one of the leading figures in fighting for equal rights for the disabled and the elderly".[1]
Early life
[edit]Wendy Elsa Greengross was born on 29 April 1925, at 10 St Mary's Road, Golders Green, London, the daughter of Morris Philip Greengross, born Moisze Fiszel Gringross (1892–1970), a manufacturing jeweller, and his wife, Miriam Greengross, née Abrahamson (1899/1900–1968).[2]
Her father was mayor of Holborn from 1960 to 1961, and her brother Sir Alan Greengross (born 1929) was a leading Conservative member of the Greater London Council.[2]
Greengross was educated at South Hampstead High School from 1936 until she was evacuated to Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, followed by University College Hospital, where she qualified as a doctor in 1949, and in 1952 won a Fulbright Scholarship to the Chicago Lying-in Hospital.[2]
Career
[edit]Together with her husband, Greengross ran a large general practice in Tottenham, London.[1] Opened in 1955, it was one of the UK's first group practices.[3] She particularly promoted family planning, and they were the country's first GP practice to have a dedicated marriage guidance.[1] Greengross worked as a GP for 35 years.[1]
Greengross received counsellor training from the Marriage Guidance Council (now Relate), and would go on to become its Chief Medical Adviser.[1] In the late 1960s, Greengross started teaching pastoral care and counselling at Leo Baeck College.[2]
Greengross went into broadcasting in the early 1970s, joining the BBC Radio 4 counselling programme If You Think You've Got Problems, which ran for nearly eight years.[4] She had her own television show on BBC1 in 1973, Let's Talk it Over.[4]
From 1972 to 1976, Greengross was an agony aunt for The Sun, but "felt the letters passed to her were more about titillation than education".[4]
Greengross wrote Jewish and Homosexual, published in 1980, by the Reform Synagogues of Great Britain, which "led the way towards equality within the British Reform and Liberal movements".[2] Greengross published several sex education books, particularly focused on more marginalised groups, such as Sex and the Handicapped Child in 1980.[2]
Greengross was a founding member and chair of the organisation Sexual Problems of Disabled People (SPOD), and a founder of the Residential Care Consortium.[2]
Selected publications
[edit]- Sex in the Middle Years (1969)[5]
- Sex in Early Marriage (1970)[6]
- Entitled to Love: the Sexual and Emotional Needs of the Handicapped (1976)[7]
- Sex and the Handicapped Child (1980)[8]
- Jewish and Homosexual (1980)[9]
- Living, Loving and Ageing (1989), with her sister-in-law Baroness Sally Greengross[10]
Personal life
[edit]In 1951, she married a surgeon, Alex Kates, and they had five children.[1]
Greengross had two daughters, Hilary and Polly, and three sons Nick, Richard, and Trevor (d. 1997).
Greengross lived for many years in Hampstead Garden Suburb, before a retirement flat in Regent's Park Road, where she died on 10 October 2012 of pneumonia.[2] She was buried at Cheshunt's Jewish Cemetery.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Doctor Wendy Greengross: Champion of the elderly and the disabled". The Independent. 6 November 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Bayfield, Tony (2016). "Greengross [married name Katz, afterwards Kates], Wendy Elsa (1925–2012), general practitioner and broadcaster". Greengross [married name Katz, later Kates], Wendy Elsa (1925–2012). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). OUP. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/106704. Retrieved 26 November 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Gulland, A. (2012). "Wendy Greengross". BMJ. 346: e8504. doi:10.1136/bmj.e8504. S2CID 220082859.
- ^ a b c Hayman, Suzie (15 October 2012). "Wendy Greengross obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
- ^ Greengross, Wendy. (1969). Sex in the middle years. National Marriage Guidance Council (Great Britain). London: National Marriage Guidance Council. ISBN 0-85351-000-8. OCLC 15599.
- ^ Greengross, Wendy. (1970). Sex in early marriage. National Marriage Guidance Council (Great Britain). London: National Marriage Guidance Council. ISBN 0-85351-005-9. OCLC 16217785.
- ^ Greengross, Wendy. (1976). Entitled to love : the sexual and emotional needs of the handicapped. London: Malaby Press [for] National Fund for Research into Crippling Diseases. ISBN 0-460-14010-8. OCLC 2633700.
- ^ Greengross, Wendy. (1980). Sex and the handicapped child. Rugby [England]: National Marriage Guidance Council, Herbert Gray College. ISBN 0-85351-051-2. OCLC 13781441.
- ^ Greengross, Wendy (1982). Jewish and Homosexual. Reform Synagogues of Great Britain. ISBN 0950592072.
- ^ Greengross, Sally. (1992). Living, Loving and Ageing : Sexual and Personal Relationships in Later Life. Greengross, Wendy. (New ed.). ISIS Large Print Bks. ISBN 1-85695-040-9. OCLC 59921113.
- 1925 births
- 2012 deaths
- People from Golders Green
- People educated at South Hampstead High School
- Alumni of the UCL Medical School
- Pritzker School of Medicine alumni
- English Jews
- 20th-century English women writers
- English women journalists
- English women columnists
- The Sun (United Kingdom) people
- British general practitioners
- British advice columnists
- English journalists
- English television presenters
- English radio presenters
- Sex education advocates
- People from Hampstead
- Deaths from pneumonia in England
- BBC radio presenters
- BBC television presenters
- British relationships and sexuality writers
- British disability rights activists
- British LGBTQ rights activists
- British birth control activists
- Jewish non-fiction writers
- Jewish physicians
- Jewish women activists
- English women activists
- Founders of charities
- English women radio presenters
- Sex educators
- Judaism and sexuality
- People associated with Leo Baeck College
- Journalists from London
- Reform Jewish feminists
- 20th-century English women
- 20th-century English people
- Women civil rights activists
- British education activists