Frances Mary Colquhoun Explained

Frances Mary Colquhoun
Birth Date:28 February 1836
Occupation:Writer

Frances Mary Colquhoun (28 February 1836 – 29 July 1920) was a Scottish writer.

Early life

Known as Mary, she was born in Edinburgh in 1836, the eldest daughter and second child of John Colquhoun and Frances Sarah Fuller Maitland. Her father was a sportsman, author of The Moor and the Loch and former army officer. Her mother was the author of Rhymes and Chimes.[1]

She grew up in Duddingston and then Royal Terrace, Edinburgh[2] in a "sternly Presbyterian" and well-connected family.[3] She and her siblings also spent time in stately homes in England and Scotland.[4]

She had four sisters and four brothers. Her sister Lucy Bethia Walford became a popular Victorian novelist and wrote about the family in Recollections of a Scottish Novelist. Her aunt was the Scottish novelist Catherine Sinclair.

Clan and the Highlands

Mary was the granddaughter of Sir James Colquhoun, Baronet of Luss and Clan Chief of the Colquhouns of Luss. She was 'intensely Highland in her sympathies, and to her there is no place so romantic or beautiful as the country of her clan, stretching along "The Bonnie Banks o' Loch Lomon'."[1] Luss is on the west bank of Loch Lomond.

Later life and litigation

Mary never married. She was president of St. Kessog's Home, Edinburgh which was devoted to the treatment of women's diseases.[5]

By his will, her father gave her the use and possession of the family home, 1 Royal Terrace, Edinburgh, so long as she remained unmarried. In 1916 she unsuccessfully bought a claim against the trustees appointed under her father's will to recover costs on repairs, insurance and fees she had spent in respect of the house.[6]

Works

Writing under the name F. Mary Colquhoun, Mary wrote articles for The Scots Magazine,[7] [8] [9] poetry, which was quoted in the 1891 book, One Hundred Modern Scottish Poets[10] and books. She wrote several Highland sketches[11] and collected Christian poems and songs. She also collected lost verses of The Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond.[12] Her works include:

Reviews

Songs of Christian Warfare. "... a neat little volume of carefully selected poems which has just been issued by Miss F. Mary Colquhoun, who is already favourably known as the author of "The Master of Rosca," "Glenroysdale' and the "Communion Afternoon." The pieces have been chosen "not so much because they are favourites of the compiler as because she has found them suited to impart comfort and encouragement to others in our common pilgrimage and warfare of faith" and the book, which is beautifully printed and well bound, deserves a most kindly reception."[15]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mackay. John. The Celtic monthly: a magazine for Highlanders. 1892. Glasgow: A. Sinclair ; Edinburgh : J. Menzies : W. Love ; Inverness : W. Mackay : J. Noble ; Oban : T. Boyd : H. Macdonald.
  2. 1851 and 1861 Census Records
  3. Book: Sutherland, John. The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. 1990. Stanford University Press. 9780804718424. en.
  4. Book: Walford, Lucy Bethia (Colquhoun). Recollections of a Scottish novelist. 1910. London : Williams and Norgate. University of California Libraries.
  5. Book: David Herschell Edwards. One Hundred Modern Scottish Poets: With Biographical and Critical Notices. 1891. Edwards. unknown library. 282. en.
  6. The Scotsman 05 January 1917
  7. The Scots Magazine 1, November 1894
  8. The Scots Magazine 1 September and 1 November 1896
  9. The Scots Magazine 01 January 1900
  10. Book: David Herschell Edwards. One Hundred Modern Scottish Poets: With Biographical and Critical Notices. 1891. Edwards. unknown library. 292–294. en.
  11. Another Literary Colquhoun, The Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette 14 February 1884
  12. John o'Groat Journal 16 October 1903 - British Newspaper Archive
  13. Falkirk Herald 23 May 1891
  14. Web site: F Mary Colquhoun - The Wine of life, or, a book of the Song Smiths / arranged by F. Mary Colquhoun.. www.royalcollection.org.uk. en. 2017-11-26.
  15. Aberdeen Press and Journal 20 December 1886