Catherine Stepney
Catherine Stepney | |
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Lady Catherine Stepney by Richard Cockle Lucas | |
Born |
Grittleton | 23 December 1778
Died |
14 April 1945 London |
Nationality | British |
Catherine Stepney (23 December 1778 – 14 April 1845) was a British novelist.
Life
Catherine Pollok was born in Grittleton in Wiltshire in 1778. Her first husband was Russell Manners, whom she divorced. In 1813 she married Sir Thomas Stepney who was the ninth and as it turned out the last Stepney baronet, of Prendergast. He was a groom of the bed-chamber to the Duke of York and he died without issue in 1825. Stepney is credited with writing six novels, but Mary Mitford claimed that Stepney's drafts were honed and polished by Letitia Elizabeth Landon.[1]
She wrote two novels during her first marriage and four known as the silver fork novels after her second marriage were about the high society she frequented.[1]
Stepney was known as a hostess because her house was a meeting place for London's artistic and literary society.[1] In 1836 she modelled for a bust by Richard Cockle Lucas who portrayed her as Cleopatra. This bust is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum.[2] The National Portrait Gallery has a painting of her made by John Hayter.[3]
Stepney died in London in 1845.[1] After her death there were accounts of how Stepney was unaware of the regard that her novels sometimes did not enjoy.[4]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Catherine Stepney, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, retrieved 5 December 2014
- ↑ Catherine, Lady Stepney (d. 1845) as Cleopatra, Richard Cockle Lucas, retrieved 4 December 2014
- ↑ Catherine Stepney, John Hayter, National Portrait Gallery, London
- ↑ A greybeard's gossip about his literary acquaintance, New Monthly Magazine, Volume 80, 1847
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