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BAYNTON, BARBARA JANET AINSLEIGH (1862-1929), author,
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daughter of Robert Laurence Kilpatrick, was born at Scone, Hunter River
district, New South Wales, in 1862. In 1880 she married Hay Frater and in 1890
Dr Thomas Baynton. A few years later she began contributing short stories to the
Bulletin and six of these were published in 1902 under the title of
Bush Studies. In 1907 appeared Human Toll, a novel, and in 1917
Cobbers, a reprint of Bush Studies, with two additional stories.
During the 1914-18 war Mrs Baynton was living in England and in 1921 she married
her third husband Baron Headley. She died at Melbourne on 28 May 1929. She was
survived by Lord Headley, and two sons and a daughter by the first marriage.
Barbara Baynton's reputation rests on half a dozen short stories, written
with much ability and power, and uncompromising in their stark realism. The
building up of detail, however, is at times overdone, and lacking humorous
relief, the stories tend to give a distorted view of life in the back-blocks.
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