Emily Underdown

Emily Underdown
Born July 28, 1863
Broughton, Lancashire, England
Died September 5, 1947 (aged 84)
Hendon, Middlesex, England
Occupation Writer, Novelist and Poet
Nationality British
Education Bachelor of Arts
Alma mater University of London

Emily Underdown (1863–1947) was an English writer, novelist and poet. She is best known for popularising Dante (1265–1321) and for her children’s books. Many of her works are written under the pseudonym Norley Chester, which name appears to have been taken from the village of Norley, Cheshire, near the town of Chester.[1] The use of pseudonyms was common with female writers of the time. She also illustrated the book The Pageant of The Year: A Garden Record In Verse.

Biography

Emily Underdown was born on 28 July 1863 at Higher Broughton, Lancashire, England. Her parents were Lieutenant-Colonel Robert George Underdown and Lydia Underdown (née Dacombe). She was the second of four children. Not much is known about her early life other than her graduation from University College London in 1898 (UCL Record Office). She lived in Lancashire and Yorkshire during her early life, moving to London at some point after 1901.[2]

She died a spinster in London on 15 August 1947. Her brother, Herbert William Underdown (born 8 July 1864; Charterhouse; Cambridge (Pemberton) B.A. L.L.M), was a solicitor (Birkbeck Bank Chambers) and a well-known art collector and antiquarian scholar.[3]

Selected bibliography

Books

Essays (by Norley Chester)

References

  1. Adrian Room, Dictionary of Pseudonyms: 13,000 Assumed Names and Their Origins. McFarland & Co Inc; 5th revised edition, 2010.
  2. English census returns 1871-1911; Royal Blue Book: Fashionable Directory and Parliamentary Guide, London, 1908.
  3. Frederick Kennedy Wilson Girdlestone, Edward Trevor Hardman, Alexander Hay Todd, Charterhouse Register, 1872–1910, Volume 1. Charterhouse School (Godalming, England). Printed for the Propietors at the Chiswick Press, 1911.