Charis Ursula Frankenburg (née Barnett; 9 February 1892 – 5 April 1985) was a British author, one of the first women eligible for a degree from the University of Oxford,[1] a founder of one of the first birth control clinics in England outside London,[2] and a member of The Mutual Admiration Society.
After they moved to near Salford, in the north-west of England, where his family business was located, Charis Frankenburg took up various local charitable roles.
[7] Topics of the 1977 interview include birth control and concerns about maternal mortality, the clinic in Salford and her partnership with Mary Stocks, and her time at Oxford.
[4] Her books include: Her work in France during World War I was awarded the Médaille Commémorative de la Grand Guerre.
[4] In 1973, she was given the freedom of the city of Salford, for her work as a JP and for "service in field of health and social welfare".