Английская Википедия:Frances Wilbraham

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Frances Maria Wilbraham (30 June 1815 – 26 June 1905) was a British novelist.

Biography

Frances Maria Wilbraham was born on 30 June 1815 at Rode Hall, Cheshire, the fifth daughter of Randle Wilbraham of Rode Hall, son of Richard Wilbraham-Bootle, and Sibylla Egerton. Her brother was General Sir Richard Wilbraham Шаблон:Postnom.[1]

During the 1866 cholera epidemic in Chester, Frances and Emily Ayckbowm volunteered to run a hospital for cholera victims. Her work caused her to be dubbed the "Florence Nightingale of Chester" by Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster.[1]

Wilbraham wrote a number of works of historical fiction.[2] She also wrote numerous stories for The Monthly Packet, edited by her friend Charlotte Yonge.[3] Her recollections of the cholera epidemic were published as Streets and Lanes of a City (1871), initially under the name Amy Dutton.[1]

Frances Maria Wilbraham died on 26 June 1905 in Chester.[1]

Bibliography

  1. For and Against: or, Queen Margaret's Badge. A Domestic Chronicle of the Fifteenth Century.  2 vol.  London: John W. Parker, 1858.[2]
  2. The Young Breton Volunteer: A Tale of 1851.  1 vol.  London: Mozley and Co., 1860.[2]
  3. The Cheshire Pilgrims: or, Sketches of Crusading Life in the Thirteenth Century.  1 vol.  London: John Morgan, 1862.[2]
  4. Not Clever, and Other Stories.  1 vol.  London: Groombridge, 1864.[2]
  5. Phil Thorndyke's adventures, 1870s.[3]
  6. Streets and Lanes of a City, 1871.[1]
  7. Hal the Barge Boy: A Sketch from Life, 1883.[4]
  8. The sere and yellow leaf : thoughts and recollections for old and young, 1884.[1]
  9. What is Right, Comes Right.  1 vol.  London: Joseph Masters, 1884.[2]

References

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