Mary Anne Hardy Explained

Mary Anne, Lady Hardy
Pseudonym:Addlestone Hill
Birth Name:Mary Anne MacDowell
Birth Date:c. 1825
Birth Place:London, England
Death Date:19 May 1891
Death Place:London, England
Resting Place:Willesden, London, England
Occupation:Writer
Language:English
Nationality:British
Citizenship:United Kingdom
Children:Iza Duffus Hardy

Mary Anne, Lady Hardy (MacDowell; c. 1825–1891), also known as Lady Duffus Hardy, with novels published under the pseudonym Addlestone Hill,[1] was an English novelist and travel writer.

Life

She was the only child of Charles MacDowell and Eliza, his second wife, born in Fitzroy Square, London, about 1825; her father had died five months before. She was entirely educated at home. She became the second wife of Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy, whom she married in 1850.[1] [2]

Sir Thomas died in 1878, and his widow received on 19 June 1879 a civil list pension, augmented in 1881. She died on 19 May 1891 at 124 Portsdown Road, London, and was buried at Willesden.[2]

Works

Lady Hardy's first significant novel, Paul Wynter's Sacrifice, was published in 1869, was a success, and was translated into French. A new edition came out in 1881. Her next novel, Daisy Nicholl (1870), achieved great success in America. In 1880 and 1881 she travelled in the United States. Her tours prompted two books, Through Cities and Prairie Lands: Sketches of an American Tour, 1881, and Down South, 1883.[2]

Other works include:[2]

Lady Hardy wrote also articles on social topics, and short stories, for journals and magazines.[2]

Family

Iza Duffus Hardy, also known as a writer, was her daughter.[2]

Notes

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bessie Louise Pierce. Joe Lester Norris. As Others See Chicago: Impressions of Visitors, 1673-1933. 29 May 2004. University of Chicago Press. 978-0-226-66821-5. 226.
  2. Hardy, Mary Anne. 2.