Virginia Woolf

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Is Virginia Woolf Dead or Still Alive? Virginia Woolf Birthday and Date of Death

Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf Death

Virginia passed away on March 28, 1941 at the age of 59 in Lewes, Sussex, England, UK. Virginia's cause of death was suicide by drowning.

Virginia Woolf death quick facts:
  • When did Virginia Woolf die?

    March 28, 1941
  • How did Virginia Woolf die? What was the cause of death?

    Suicide by drowning
  • How old was Virginia Woolf when died?

    59
  • Where did Virginia Woolf die? What was the location of death?

    Lewes, Sussex, England, UK

Virginia Woolf Birthday and Date of Death

Virginia Woolf was born on January 25, 1882 and died on March 28, 1941. Virginia was 59 years old at the time of death.

Birthday: January 25, 1882
Date of Death: March 28, 1941
Age at Death: 59

Is Virginia Woolf's father, Leslie Stephen, dead or alive?

Leslie Stephen's information is not available now.

Is Virginia Woolf's mother, Adeline Virginia Stephen, dead or alive?

Adeline Virginia Stephen's information is not available now.

Virginia Woolf's sister :

  • Vanessa Bell

Virginia Woolf's brothers :

Virginia has 2 brothers:
  • Thoby Stephen
  • Adrian Stephen

Virginia Woolf - Biography

London-born v*rginia Woolf came from a wealthy family and, unlike her brothers, received her education at home, an unusual step for the times. Her parents had both had children from previous marriages, so she grew up with a variety of siblings, stepbrothers and stepsisters. Her father was a well-respected editor and author and the former son-in-law of William Makepeace Thackeray. Author James Russell Lowell was her godfather, and Henry James and George Elliott were regular visitors and guests at the family home. As she recalled later in life, her most pleasant childhood memories were of the summers spent at the family home in Cornwall, by Porthminster Bay (the Godrevy Lighthouse there was the basis for her novel "To the Lighthouse").The sudden death of v*rginia's mother in 1895, when she was 13, and the passing of her sister two years later led to the first of v*rginia's mental breakdowns. In 1904 her father died, which caused a complete mental and physical collapse and for a while she was sent to a mental institution to recover. Nervous breakdowns and bouts of severe depression tormented v*rginia throughout her life, and the fact that as children she and her sister Vanessa were sexually abused by two of their stepbrothers added to her already considerable feelings of guilt and inferiority.She studied at London's Kings College, where she became acquainted with such literary figures as Lytton Strachey, Saxon Sydney-Turner and Leonard Woolf. She married Woolf in 1912. v*rginia was always ashamed of what she termed her "unattractive countenance", and once wrote that "being wanted [was] a pleasure that I have never felt". In 1922 she met Vita Sackville-West, and the two women began a relationship that lasted for almost ten years. She was said to have written her novel "Orlando" as a love letter to West.After the publication of her novel "Between the Acts" she fell into a deep depression, exacerbated by the destruction of her London home by Nazi planes during the bombing of that city, and the less than enthusiastic critical reaction to her biography of her close friend Roger Fry. Her condition deteriorated to the point where she was unable to write or even read. She finally had a full-blown nervous breakdown. Unable and unwilling to continue, she wrote a note to her husband saying that "I am certain I am going mad again" and "I shan't recover this time . . . I can't fight any longer . . . I can't go on spoiling your life any longer." On March 28, 1941, she left her home, walked to the banks of the nearby River Ouse, loaded heavy stones into her pockets and walked into the water. She was 59 years old.

DEAD OR ALIVE?