Elizabeth le Blond grave

Elizabeth le Blond (1860-1934)

An unstoppable Victorian adventuress who pioneered mountaineering, photography and film-making.

Lizzie le Blond

Lizzie le Blond, born Elizabeth Hawkins-Whitshed in Ireland, was the daughter of a baronet. Though she inherited the family wealth and estate, Lizzie did not choose a traditional aristocratic life.

Elizabeth le Blond portrait
Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Lizzie le Blond

Mountaineering

She briefly joined London society aged 18, married a dashing army officer Captain Fred Burnaby and had a son, but the marriage did not last long. Lizzie was troubled by lung problems and moved to Switzerland in search of a cure. 

It was here that she developed a taste for mountaineering. Though she did wear a demure skirt to climb, Lizzie’s choice of activity and outfits were scandalous to her titled Victorian family.

Having survived a long life full of adventure and danger, Lizzie died quietly in Wales aged 74 from complications after an operation.
Credit: Pearson’s Magazine

Winter sports

The spectacular Alpine scenery inspired Lizzie to take up photography, and she wrote and illustrated a number of books about climbing. Her lifelong interest in the sport led her to make over 100 ascents, including 20 first ascents of peaks in the Alps and Norway. She also help set up the Ladies Alpine Club.

Lizzie married again after Burnaby was killed in action, but her relationship with engineering professor John Main was equally short-lived. However, her third marriage to Aubrey Le Blond in 1900 seems to have been much more successful. She travelled widely with Aubrey, taking photos and writing. She was also one of the first women to go into film-making, shooting a series of highly-regarded short films in Switzerland.

Elizabeth le Blond enjoying winter sports in St Moritz
Credit: Mrs Aubrey le Blond / Wikimedia Commons
Lizzie took took this atmospheric shot of women curling at St Moritz.
Having survived a long life full of adventure and danger, Lizzie died quietly in Wales aged 74 from complications after an operation.
Credit: Pearson’s Magazine
Lizzie climbing in the mountains.

Lizzie had already lived a remarkable life by the time the First World War broke out. She volunteered in France, and was awarded the Cross of the Legion d’Honneur for her work as a nurse, fundraiser and campaigner for Anglo-French understanding during and after the war.

Further information:

The London Dead
Our Wicklow Heritage
Who’s Who of Victorian Cinema