Grace Cash was born in 1872. She married Harold Oakeshott, and both were active in socialist circles. Grace wrote a paper in 1900 on
Women in the Cigar Trade in London, published in
The Economic Journal. She was involved in the foundation of the first Trade School for Girls in 1904, and in the
Women's Industrial Council. In 1907, a pile of her clothes was found on a beach in
Brittany where she was on holiday, giving the impression that she had drowned. In fact, she had made plans to emigrate to New Zealand with her lover Walter Reeve, apparently with the knowledge of her husband, at a time when divorce was difficult and scandalous. The supposed widower, Harold Oakeshott, later married again, bigamously. In New Zealand, Oakeshott used the name Joan Reeve and had three children with Walter Reeve. She died of
multiple sclerosis in 1929 in New Zealand. ==Legacy==