22 August 1976(1976-08-22) (aged 88) Lane Cove New South Wales, Australia
Pen name
Cinderella
Occupation
poet, short story writer, journalist
Citizenship
Australian
Ella May McFadyen (26 November 1887 – 22 August 1976) was an Australian poet, journalist and children's writer. For 18 years she conducted "The Children's Page" for The Sydney Mail and was known as Cinderella.
Early life and education
McFadyen was born at "Burrundulla", John Street, Stanmore on 26 November 1887 to Donald and Mary (née Wilson).[1]
Career
McFadyen's first short story accepted for publication was "The Wedding of Dolly Valerie" in 1906.[2] It appeared in the "Young Folks" column of The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser on 31 January 1906.[3] Her first published poem was "A Satin Shoe", published in May 1906 in The Australasian.[4]
McFadyen's first book of poetry, Outland born and other verses, published in 1911, was favourably reviewed by The Register (Adelaide) of 2 December 1911, who wrote "has a wealth of imagery, a fertile fancy, much technical skill, and in particular a virility".[11]
From May 1912 to July 1913 McFadyen was a regular contributor of short stories and poems to "A Page for the Children" in The Sydney Mail.[12][13] In late 1919 she was chosen to conduct "The Children’s Page" for The Sydney Mail, a role she fulfilled until the newspaper closed on 28 December 1938.[14][15] For a further two and a half years "Cinderella’s Column" appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald, the final article being on 26 June 1941.[16]
McFadyen donated all profits from publication of her 1917 collection of war poems, Songs of the Last Crusade to War Funds and dedicated the book to her brother who was on active service.[17]
In the early 1920s she wrote the words for a series of part songs composed by Florence E. Axtens for use in schools. Songs included "Till We Forget", "The Kangaroo", "Hush-a-Hush", "The Mosquito", "The Mountain Echo" and "Wattle Blossom".[18]
In 1924–1925 The Sydney Mail published her novella, Matched Pearls, serialised in four instalments.[19]
McFadyen was a foundation member of the Society of Women Writers, formed in Sydney in 1925.[20]
Her poem "Tom-Tit" was selected by Joan S. Mackaness and George Mackaness for inclusion in Angus & Robertson'sFrolic Fair: A Book of Australian Verse for Children Under Ten.[21][22]
In 1938 Dymocks published a collection of McFadyen's poems, both published and unpublished, called Here's Fun for You!. S.E.N. of The Sydney Mail complemented her for her "singing pen" and considered them "felicitous verse" which was "well suited to the unsophisticated, assimilative, and wholesome minds of children".[23]