Annette Meakin


Annette Mary Budgett Meakin was a British travel author. She and her mother were the first English women to travel to Japan on board the Trans-Siberian railway.

Life

Annette M. B. Meakin was born on 12 August 1867. Her parents were Edward Ebenezer and Sarah Meakin. Her father worked as a tea planter in Almora in India.
She went to school in England and in Germany, studying music at the Royal College of Music, Kensington, and the Stern Conservatoire, Berlin, and classics at University College London. During World War One she took the job of a chemist's assistant but writing was her career.
She and her mother, Sarah Meakin, were the first English women to travel to Japan on board the Trans-Siberian railway. They left London on January 1900 and they arrived in Russia on 21 May 1900 after delaying for a time in Paris. Annette noted that they had reduced their joint luggage to just three pieces. She wrote an account that was published the following year. Her book "A Ribbon of Iron" also described their stop-overs in Omsk, Tomsk, Krasnoyarsk and for a trip on the nearby Yenisei River which flows to the Arctic Ocean. Her book, "The Ribbon of Iron" was extensively quoted in the book of Harmon Tupper, "To the Great Ocean – Siberia and the Trans-Siberian Railway", published in London by Secker & Warburg in 1965.
She successfully sued another author for plagiarising her book on Galicia in 1921. In 1912 Catherine Gasquoine Hartley published The Story of Santiago de Compostela. Hartley and her publisher were successfully sued for plagiarism by Meakin. She showed that Hartley's book was too similar to her book Galicia, the Switzerland of Spain. As part of the settlement Hartley's book was removed from libraries.
Meakin died in 1959. She donated her papers to the Bodleian Library.

Selected works