[3] The Clutton-Brocks lived in London at the Oxford House settlement during the Second World War and that was where their daughter, Sarah-Anne (later Mrs Roschnik), was born in 1942.
The farm became a location for talks and her husband was involved in drafting the constitution of the Southern Rhodesia African National Congress in 1957.
[4] She had started by treating children on a table and soon there was insufficient room for the child patients which included those with polio, muscular dystrophy and cerebral palsy, so the 35-bed Mukuwapasi Clinic was built.
[1] In 1960 she and Guy moved to Botswana, funded by the Africa Development Trust and the Mukuwapasi Clinic was thereafter run by Margaret Shumba (later Mrs.
[9] Molly continued to train nurses and establish clinics based on the therapy she used on small children in Botswana.
They returned to Rhodesia to live in "Cold Comfort Farm" just outside Salisbury, to find that nationalist leaders were in prison.
[12] Returning to the UK, they lived in North Wales and when Rhodesia achieved independence as Zimbabwe they decided not to move back.