Charlotte Palmer | |
Birth Date: | about 1762 |
Death Date: | 1834 or after |
Nationality: | British |
Charlotte Palmer (c. 1762–1834 or after) was an English teacher and writer mentioned in the Dictionary of National Biography.[1] She is remembered mainly as a novelist.
Palmer, thought to have been born in 1762, gained notice with a five-volume epistolary novel, Female Stability; or the History of Miss Belville, published in 1780. The preface confusingly asserts that it was written by "a sister" who had since died.
Nonetheless, Palmer published two more works in the 1790s: Letters on several subjects from a preceptress to her pupils who have left school in 1791, and A Newly-Invented Copybook in 1797. Both were aimed at the educational market and the latter came with an apology from the woman author to male schoolteachers and the assurance that she was not attempting to usurp their authority.[2]
Palmer's two other works were Integrity and Content: an Allegory and the intriguingly titled It Is and It Is Not a Novel, both published in 1792. An account of the latter appears in The Novel: An Alternative History, 1600–1800, which was not published until 2002.[3]
Palmer continued to run schools until she was arrested for debt. In time she cleared the debt and was last identified in 1834.[2]