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<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title>Digital Dinah Craik Site Index</title>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<authority>University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. May 2016.</authority>
<availability>
<licence target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/"><p>The Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA
4.0) License applies to this document.</p>
<p>The license was added on <date when="2016-05-25">25 May
2016.</date></p></licence>
</availability>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<p>This prosopography has been populated from the letters of Dinah Craik. Information
about each person comes from Craik's correspondence and the Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography.</p>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="DigitalCraikTeam">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="BourrierKaren">
<persName>
<surname>Bourrier</surname>
<forename>Karen</forename>
<roleName>Project Director</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Karen Bourrier is an assistant professor at the University of
Calgary. Her interests include Victorian studies, disability studies, and the
digital humanities.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ParkerJanice">
<persName>
<surname>Parker</surname>
<forename>Janice</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Janice Parker is a PhD candidate at the University of
Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FukushimaKailey">
<persName>
<surname>Fukushima</surname>
<forename>Kailey</forename>
<roleName>Project Manager</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Kailey Fukushima is a Digitization Assistant at the University of
Calgary. She holds a BA (Hons) in English, 2016.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonHannah">
<persName>
<surname>Anderson</surname>
<forename>Hannah</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="HingstonKylee-Anne">
<persName>
<surname>Hingston</surname>
<forename>Kylee-Anne</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>St. Thomas More College</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="EhnesCaley">
<persName>
<surname>Ehnes</surname>
<forename>Caley</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>College of the Rockies</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="PastEditors">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="JacobiKelsey">
<persName>
<surname>Jacobi</surname>
<forename>Kelsey</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="GivogueStevensonLecia">
<persName>
<surname>Givogue Stevenson</surname>
<forename>Lecia</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="EllsworthAaron">
<persName>
<surname>Ellsworth</surname>
<forename>Aaron</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Aaron Ellsworth is an MA student at the University of Calgary.
His research interests include comics, semiology, and narratology.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CarterJaclyn">
<persName>
<surname>Carter</surname>
<forename>Jaclyn</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Jaclyn Carter is a PhD candidate at the University of Calgary.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CunninghamSidney">
<persName>
<surname>Cunningham</surname>
<forename>Sidney</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Sidney Cunningham is an MA student at the University of Calgary.
His specialization is in contemporary transgender literature, as well as early
modern literature.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AlemanKeilaKarinne">
<persName>
<surname>Aleman</surname>
<forename>Keila Karinne</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary </affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Keila Karinne Aleman is a PhD candidate and teaching assistant at
the University of Calgary. Her research is on gender in popular culture,
comics, and manga.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RuddyPippa">
<persName>
<surname>Ruddy</surname>
<forename>Pippa</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Pippa Ruddy is a Master's student at the University of Calgary.
Her interests include affect theory, performance/performativity studies, and
intersectional feminism.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RahmanZainub">
<persName>
<surname>Rahman</surname>
<forename>Zainub</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Rahman Zainub is an MA student at the University of
Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FoxKerryLeigh">
<persName>
<surname>Fox</surname>
<forename>Kerry-Leigh</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
<note type="bio">Kerry-Leigh Fox is an MA student at the University of Calgary.
Her interests include Victorian literature, Vernon Lee, queer studies, gender
studies, and creative writing.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BestWill">
<persName>
<surname>Best</surname>
<forename>Will</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="KentSarah">
<persName>
<surname>Kent</surname>
<forename>Sarah</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="WyattBronwyn">
<persName>
<surname>Wyatt</surname>
<forename>Bronwyn</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
</person>
<!--KF: Bronwyn Wyatt is Kylee-Anne Hingston's sister. She helped transcribe one of Dinah Craik's letters.-->
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="Pets">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="Christopher">
<persName>Christopher</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Christopher appears to be one of Dinah's
cats from her time at <placeName ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Blackie">
<persName>Blackie</persName>
<note type="bio"><persName>Blackie</persName> was the Craiks' cat at the
<placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner House.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Pixie">
<persName>Pixie</persName>
<note type="bio"><persName>Pixie</persName> was the Craiks' horse at the
<placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner House.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Songbird">
<persName>Songbird</persName>
<note type="bio"><persName>Songbird</persName> was a horse of <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah Craik</persName>'s at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Nell">
<persName>Nell</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Nell</persName> was <persName
ref="#MulockTom">Thomas Mulock</persName> Jr.'s beloved horse.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Ophelia" sex="F">
<persName>Ophelia</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Ophelia</persName> was one of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s chickens at <placeName
ref="#LynoverCottage">Lynover Cottage.</placeName> She was a Cochin hen
given to <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> as a present.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Hamlet" sex="M">
<persName>Hamlet</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Hamlet</persName> was one of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s chickens at <placeName
ref="#LynoverCottage">Lynover Cottage.</placeName> He was a Cochin chicken
given to given to <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> as a present, and was
the male companion to <persName ref="#Ophelia">Ophelia.</persName></note>
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="HistoricalPeople">
<head>Historical People</head>
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="DMC" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Craik</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Mulock</surname>
<forename>Dinah</forename>
<forename>Maria</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1826"/>
<death when="1887"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<event type="marriage" when="1865">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Maria Mulock</persName> married <persName
ref="#GeorgeCraik">George Lillie Craik.</persName></desc>
</event>
</person>
<person xml:id="ScottWalter" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Scott</surname>
<forename>Walter</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="AldenHenry" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Alden</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio">Henry Alden was an editor at <title corresp="#HarpersMagazine"
>Harper's magazine.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PhayreJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Phayre</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio">John Phayre was a clerk at <title corresp="#Harpers"
>Harper's.</title> See
https://archive.org/stream/houseofharpercen00harp/houseofharpercen00harp_djvu.txt</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CairdMrsEdward" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Caird</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio">Mrs. Edward Caird was married to the Master of Balliol, Dr.
Caird. See
http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/3rd-june-1916/15/the-late-mrs-edward-caird
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OsgoodJames">
<persName><surname>Osgood</surname>
<forename>James</forename>
<forename>Ripleh</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio">James Ripley Osgood was the editor of the Atlantic and possibly
Our Young Folks.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LowSampson" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Low</surname>
<forename>Sampson</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1797"/>
<death when="1886"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Sampson Low was the London literary agent
and correspondent for the American publisher <orgName ref="#Harpers"
>Harper's.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockTom" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<forename>Mellard</forename>
<addName>Tom</addName>
<genName>Jr.</genName>
</persName>
<birth when="1827-11-18"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Tom Mulock was Dinah's younger
brother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockThomas" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<forename>Samuel</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1789"/>
<death when="1869-08-11"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Thomas Mulock was Dinah's father.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockDinah" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Mulock</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Mellard</surname>
<forename>Dinah</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1794-04-23"/>
<death when="1845-10-03"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah (Mellard) Mulock was Dinah (Mulock)
Craik's mother</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockBen" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Benjamin</forename>
<forename>Robert</forename>
<addName>Ben</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829-06-18"/>
<death when="1863"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Engineer</occupation>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Ben Mulock was Dinah's youngest
brother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1801"/>
<death when="1879-12-25"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Jane Mulock was one of Dinah's paternal
aunts who lived in <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockEmily" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Emily</forename>
<surname>Mulock</surname></persName>
<birth when="1801"/>
<death when="1885-06-02"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Emily Mulock was one of Dinah's paternal
aunts who lived in <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockEliza" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
<addName>Eliza</addName></persName>
<birth when="1787"/>
<death when="1866-09-07"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Eliza Mulock was the eldest of Dinah's
paternal aunts living at <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockFrances" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Frances</forename>
<addName>Fanny</addName></persName>
<birth when="1807"/>
<death when="1882"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Fanny Mulock was one of Dinah's paternal
aunts living at <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockAnn" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Ann</forename>
<addName>Anne</addName></persName>
<birth when="1806"/>
<death when="1894-12-01"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Fanny Mulock was one of Dinah's paternal
aunts living at <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockAlicia" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Hoblyn</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Mulock</surname>
<forename>Alicia</forename>
<forename>Bonne</forename></persName>
<birth when="1812"/>
<death when="1896-06-26"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Alicia Mulock was one of Dinah's paternal
aunts who lived in <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName> She married
<persName ref="#HoblynFrancis">Francis Parker Hoblyn</persName>, a surgeon,
in <date when="1864">1864</date>.</note>
<!-- JP: source for date of death: probate -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ReadeMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Reade</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Mellard</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename></persName>
<birth when="1790-07-06"/>
<death when="1866"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mary Reade was Dinah's maternal aunt.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HallSamuelCarter" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hall</surname>
<forename>Samuel</forename>
<forename>Carter</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1800"/>
<death when="1889"/>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Samuel Carter Hall was the editor of
<title>New Monthly Magazine</title> and the <title ref="#ArtJournal">Art
Journal.</title> He married <persName ref="#AnnaMariaHall">Anna Maria
Fielding</persName> in <date when="1824">1824.</date></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HallAnnaMaria" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Hall</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Fielding</surname>
<forename>Anna</forename>
<forename>Maria</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1800"/>
<death when="1881"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<affiliation from="1852" to="1853" role="editor"><title>Sharpe's London
Magazine</title></affiliation>
<affiliation from="1861" to="1868" role="editor"><title>St James's
Magazine</title></affiliation>
<residence>The Rosery, Old Brompton</residence>
<event type="marriage" when="1824">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#AnnaMariaHall">Anna Maria Fielding</persName> married
<persName ref="#SamuelCarterHall">Samuel Carter Hall</persName>.</desc>
</event>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Anna Maria Hall was an Irish-born writer
and editor. She lived in England with her husband <persName
ref="#HallSamuelCarter">Samuel Carter Hall.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersAnnie" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Anne</forename>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<addName>Annie</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1828"/>
<death when="1898"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Annie Miers was a close friend of Dinah's
who attended her wedding to <persName ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName> and
who, along with <persName ref="#WolleyEmily">Emily Wolley</persName>, was one
of the two executors of Dinah's estate.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersEllen" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Miers</surname>
<surname type="married">MacGregor</surname>
<forename>Ellen</forename>
<forename>Emily</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1858"/>
<death when="1951"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Brazilian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Ellen, an English subject born in Brazil,
was the niece of <persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie Miers</persName> and a young
friend of Dinah's. Dinah attended her wedding to Archibald Grey MacGregor on
<date when="1887">24 September 1887</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersEdward" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1851"/>
<death when="1930"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Brazilian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Edward, an English subject born in Brazil,
was the nephew of Dinah's close friend <persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie
Miers</persName>. Edward's father was <persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis
Miers</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersHarry" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
<addName>Harry</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1858"/>
<death when="1942"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Brazilian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Harry, an English subject born in Brazil,
was the nephew of Dinah's close friend <persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie
Miers</persName>. Harry's father was <persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis
Miers</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersFrancis" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1822"/>
<death/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">
<!-- KF: I have deleted Janice's note here because it was a word-by-word repeat of "MiersHarry" (must have been a mistake!) The persName and the birth and death dates are also the same as the "MiersHarry" xml:id. I assume this is the Francis Miers who was an engineer and was born in Brazil in 1822 (source: Janice's doc "Miers family notes" in dropbox). -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersKatie" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Miers</surname>
<surname type="married">Fry</surname>
<forename>Catherine</forename>
<forename>Emily</forename>
<addName>Katie</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1856-05-29"/>
<death when="1933-08-01"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Brazilian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Katie, an English subject born in Brazil,
was the niece of Dinah's close friend <persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie
Miers</persName>. Katie's father was <persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis
Miers</persName>. She married Edward Sydney Fry in Bromley in <date
when="1886">1886</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersAnnieE" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Annie</forename>
<forename>Esther</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1854"/>
<death when="1942-02-14"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Brazilian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Annie, an English subject born in Brazil,
was the niece of Dinah's close friend <persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie
Miers</persName>. Annie's father was <persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis
Miers</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersJulia" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Miers</surname>
<forename>Julia</forename>
<forename>Mary</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1865"/>
<death when="1843-08-20"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Julia was the niece of Dinah's close friend
<persName ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie Miers</persName>. Julia's father was
<persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis Miers</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JenningsFelicia" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Jennings</surname>
<forename>Felicia</forename>
<forename>Hanmer</forename></persName>
<birth when="1832-08-30"/>
<death when="1911-10-09"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Felicia Jennings was a friend <persName
ref="#MiersAnnie">Annie Miers</persName> and companion to Annie's brother
<persName ref="#MiersFrancis">Francis's</persName> mother-in-law for many
years after she was widowed.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MarstonWestland" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Marston</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Westland</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1819"/>
<death when="1890"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Westland Marston was a playwright. Dinah
was very close to their entire family throughout the 1850s and beyond, often
spending Christmas with them. Ben may have been engaged to one of the
girls.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MarstonEleanor" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Marston</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Potts</surname>
<forename>Eleanor</forename>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<!--<birth when="1807/8">-->
<death when="1870"/>
<occupation/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Eleanor Marston was married to <persName
ref="#MarstonWestland">Westland Marston.</persName> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MarstonPhilipBourke" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Marston</surname>
<forename>Philip</forename>
<forename>Bourke</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1850-08-13"/>
<death when="1887-02-14"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Philip Marston was the third child of
Dinah's close friends <persName ref="#MarstonWestland">John Westland
Marston</persName> and <persName ref="MarstonEleanor">Eleanor
Marston</persName>. Dinah Craik was his godmother. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JamesMaria" sex="2">
<persName><surname>James</surname><forename>Maria</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Maria James was a friend of Dinah's from
her days in Camden.</note>
</person>
<person/>
<person xml:id="GaskellElizabeth">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Gaskell</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Elizabeth Gaskell was a novelist and
acquaintance of Dinah Craik's.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellSydney">
<persName>
<surname>Dobell</surname>
<forename>Sydney</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1824"/>
<death when="1874"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation>Spasmodic Poets</affiliation>
<!-- http://www.unz.org/Pub/BookmanUK-1927jan-00207 Bookman article on Sydney -->
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellClarence" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Dobell</surname>
<forename>Clarence</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1836"/>
<death when="1917"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Clarence Dobell and his wife <persName
ref="#DobellEmily">Emily</persName>were close friends of Dinah's. Clarence
illustrated Dinah's <date when="1860">1860</date> collection <title
ref="#OurYear">Our Year</title> and painted a portrait of Dinah.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellEmily" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Dobell</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Duffield</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename>
<forename>Ann</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1847"/>
<death when="1921"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Emily was the wife of <persName
ref="#DobellClarence">Clarence Dobell</persName>. Her sister married
<persName ref="#CraikHenry">Henry Craik.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellWalter" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Walter</forename>
<surname>Dobell</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Walter Dobell was the son of <persName
ref="#DobellClarence">Clarence</persName> and <persName ref="#DobellEmily"
>Emily Dobell</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellEva" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Dobell</surname>
<forename>Eveline</forename>
<forename>Jessie</forename>
<addName>Eva</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1876-01-30"/>
<death when="1963-09-03"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Eva was the young daughter of Dinah's good
friends <persName ref="#DobellClarence">Clarence</persName> and <persName
ref="#DobellEmily">Emily</persName> Dobell and the niece of poet <persName
ref="#DobellSydney">Sydney Dobell.</persName> Eva also became a poet and is
known for her WWI poetry.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RiviereBriton" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Riviere</surname>
<forename>Briton</forename>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<affiliation>Oxford University</affiliation>
<affiliation>Royal Academy</affiliation>
<affiliation>Good Words</affiliation>
<event type="marriage" when="1867-08-06">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#MaryDobell">Mary Alice Dobell</persName> married
<persName ref="#BritonRiviere">Briton Riviere</persName>.</desc>
</event>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellMary" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Dobell</surname>
<surname type="married">Riviere</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Alice</forename>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<residence>Detmore House</residence>
<event type="marriage" when="1867-08-06">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#MaryDobell">Mary Alice Dobell</persName> married
<persName ref="#BritonRiviere">Briton Riviere</persName>.</desc>
</event>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyEllen" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Jolly</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Dobell</surname>
<forename>Ellen</forename>
<addName>Mrs. Paul Jolly</addName>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyPaulSr" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Jolly</surname>
<forename>Paul</forename>
</persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="DobellNora" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="DobellJohn" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="DobellJulietta" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Dobell</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Thompson</surname>
<forename>Julietta</forename>
</persName>
<note>Julietta Dobell was the matriarch of <orgName ref="#Dobell">the Dobell
clan</orgName>. Ursula March in Craik's novel <title
ref="#JohnHalifaxGentleman">John Halifax, Gentleman</title> may have been
based on her.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrysdaleLady" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Drysdale</surname>
<surname type="married">Copeland
<!-- surname of first (deceased) husband --></surname>
<surname type="maiden">Pew</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
<roleName>Lady</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1787"/>
<death when="1887"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<affiliation>Moor Park</affiliation>
<note type="bio">J. Miriam Benn, "Drysdale George (1824-1904)," ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LaneMary" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Lane</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Drysdale</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1823"/>
<death when="1891"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="LaneEdward" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Lane</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>Wickstead</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1822"/>
<death when="1891"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<affiliation>Moor Park</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrysdaleCharles" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Drysdale</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>Robert</forename>
</persName>
<birth notBefore="1828" notAfter="1829"/>
<death when="1907"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation>Trinity College, Cambridge</affiliation>
<affiliation>University College, London</affiliation>
<affiliation>University of St Andrews</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrysdaleGeorge" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Drysdale</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1824"/>
<death when="1904"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation>Glasgow University</affiliation>
<affiliation>Moor Park</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacreadyWilliamCharles" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Macready</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Charles</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Dinah knew Macready in her youth from her
time in London. According to Aleyn Lyell Reade her father got into a huge fight
with Macready.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HolmanHunt" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Hunt</surname>
<forename>Holman</forename>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1827"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation ref="#PRB">Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="WaughFanny" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Waugh</surname>
<forename type="married">Hunt</forename>
<addName>Fanny</addName>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Fanny (Waugh) Hunt was William Holman
Hunt's first wife. <!-- KB: not sure if Craik knew her well. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WaughEdith" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Waugh</surname>
<surname type="married">Hunt</surname>
<forename>Edith</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Edith Waugh was William Holman Hunt's
second wife and the sister of his first wife Fanny Waugh. Dinah Craik
chaperoned her to Switzerland for her marriage to Holman Hunt in <date
when="1875">1875</date> when the Deceased Wife's Sister Act made such a
marriage illegal.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HuntGladysHolman" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Hunt</surname>
<forename>Gladys</forename>
<forename>Millais</forename>
<forename>Mulock</forename>
<forename>Holman</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Dinah's goddaughter and the first child of
<persName ref="#EdithWaugh">Edith Waugh</persName> and <persName
ref="#HolmanHunt">Holman Hunt</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackettHenry" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Henry</forename>
<surname>Blackett</surname></persName>
<birth when="1825"/>
<death when="1871"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation><orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and
Blackett</orgName></affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrightJohn" sex="1">
<persName><forename>John</forename>
<surname>Bright</surname></persName>
<birth when="1811"/>
<death when="1889"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="GladstoneWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><forename>William</forename>
<forename>Ewart</forename>
<surname>Gladstone</surname>
</persName>
<birth when="1809"/>
<death when="1898"/>
<occupation>Prime Minister</occupation>
<occupation>Prime Minister</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="BensonEdward" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>White</forename>
<surname>Benson</surname>
<roleName>Archbishop</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829"/>
<death when="1896"/>
<occupation from="1883" to="1896">Archbishop of Canterbury</occupation>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="TempleFrederick" sex="1">
<persName>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<surname>Temple</surname>
<roleName>Archbishop</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1821"/>
<death when="1902"/>
<occupation from="1897" to="1902">Archbishop of Canterbury</occupation>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacmillanAlexander" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Macmillan</surname>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1818-10-03"/>
<death when="1896-01-26"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</affiliation>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">Alexander Macmillan was the younger of the Macmillan
brothers.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacmillanDaniel" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Macmillan</surname>
<forename>Daniel</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1813-09-13"/>
<death when="1857-06-26"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</affiliation>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">Daniel Macmillan was the elder of the Macmillan
brothers, who established a small bookshop and publishing house at <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Aldersgate">57 Aldersgate Street</placeName>in <date
when="1842">1842</date>. He died of tuberculosis, leaving the company and
his family to his brother <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander"
>Alexander.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GuizotFrancois" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Guizot</surname>
<forename>François</forename></persName>
<birth when="1787"/>
<death when="1874"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>French</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah translated works by François Guizot
and his daughter <persName ref="#DeWittHenrietteGuizot">Henriette Guizot de
Witt.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DeWittHenriette" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Guizot</surname>
<surname type="married"><nameLink>de</nameLink> Witt</surname>
<forename>Henriette</forename></persName>
<birth when="1829"/>
<death when="1908"/>
<occupation>Author</occupation>
<nationality>French</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah translated works by Henriette
Guizot de Witt and her father <persName ref="#GuizotFrançois">François
Guizot.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DoreGustave" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Dore</surname><forename>Gustave</forename></persName>
<birth> </birth>
<death/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="ShawRichardNorman" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Shaw</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename>
<forename>Norman</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831"/>
<death when="1912"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Architect</occupation>
<affiliation ref="#RoyalAcademy">Royal Academy</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChapmanFrederic" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chapman</surname>
<forename>Frederic</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1823"/>
<death when="1895"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChapmanClara" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Chapman</surname>
<forename>Clara</forename>
</persName>
<death when="1866"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrowningElizabethBarrett" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Browning</surname><surname type="maiden"
>Barrett</surname><forename>Elizabeth</forename></persName>
<birth when="1806"/>
<death when="1861"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrowningRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Browning</surname><forename>Robert</forename></persName>
<birth when="1812"/>
<death when="1889"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="BulwerLyttonEdward">
<persName><surname>Bulwer</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>Lytton</forename></persName>
<birth when="1803"/>
<death when="1873"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="HerfordLaura" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Herford</surname>
<forename>Anne</forename>
<forename>Laura</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831-10-16"/>
<death when="1870-10-28"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio">Laura Herford, the first woman to be admitted to the <orgName
ref="#RoyalAcademy">Royal Academy</orgName>, was a close friend of Dinah
Craik's. She was aunt to the illustrator <persName ref="#AllinghamHelen">Helen
Allingham</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AllinghamHelen" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Allingham</surname><surname type="maiden"
>Paterson</surname><forename>Helen</forename></persName>
<birth when="1848"/>
<death when="1926"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<event type="marriage" when="1874">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#AllinghamWilliam">William Allingham</persName> married
<persName ref="#AllinghamHelen">Helen Allingham</persName>.</desc>
</event>
<note type="bio">Artist Helen Allingham illustrated Craik's work. She was niece to
the artist <persName ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AllinghamWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Allingham</surname><forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1824"/>
<death when="1889"/>
<occupation>Author</occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<event type="marriage" when="1874">
<label>Marriage</label>
<desc><persName ref="#AllinghamWilliam">William Allingham</persName> married
<persName ref="#AllinghamHelen">Helen Allingham</persName>.</desc>
</event>
</person>
<person xml:id="MillaisJohn" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Millais</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Everett</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1829"/>
<death when="1896"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation ref="#PRB">Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="LeightonFrederick" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Leighton</surname>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<roleName>Sir</roleName>
<roleName>Baron</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1830"/>
<death when="1896"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation from="1878" to="1896">President of the <orgName ref="#RoyalAcademy"
>Royal Academy</orgName></occupation>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissFanny">
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Miss Fanny was a servant in the Craiks'
first household as a married couple, <placeName ref="#UpperTooting">Upper
Tooting</placeName>. See Letter to Miss Rankin in the Parrish Collection,
Princeton.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonJosephNoel">
<persName>
<surname>Paton</surname>
<forename>Joseph</forename>
<forename>Noel</forename>
<roleName>Sir</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1821"/>
<death when="1901"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation>Royal Academy</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonMaggie" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Gourlay</surname>
<surname>Paton</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
<addName>Maggie</addName>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death when="1900"/>
<residence>33 George Square, Edinburgh</residence>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikGeorge" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Lillie</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Accountant</occupation>
<affiliation>Macmillan</affiliation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio">George Craik was Dinah's husband.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikHenry" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1846"/>
<death when="1927"/>
<occupation>Civil Servant</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Henry Craik was <persName ref="#CraikGeorge"
>George</persName>'s younger brother. He married <persName
ref="#DobellEmily">Emily Dobell (née Duffield)'s sister.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">William Craik was <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName>'s younger brother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikJames" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>James</forename>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1802"/>
<death when="1870"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio">Reverend James Craik was the father of Dinah's husband <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName>. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikMargaret" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Craik</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Grieve</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1806"/>
<death when="1883"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio">Margaret Craik was Dinah's mother-in-law.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename></persName>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Jane Craik was <persName ref="#CraikGeorge"
>George</persName>'s older sister.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikMaggie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
<addName>Maggie</addName></persName>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Maggie Craik was <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName>'s older sister.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikJanie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
<addName>Janie</addName></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Janie Craik was the wife of <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName>'s younger brother <persName
ref="#CraikWilliam">William</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikGeorgiana" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>Georgiana</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831"/>
<death when="1895"/>
<occupation>Author</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio">Georgiana Craik was a cousin of Dinah's husband, who Dinah knew
well beforehand. She was born in Brompton, London, but lived in Ireland.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikGeorgeLillieSr" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Lillie</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1798"/>
<death when="1866"/>
<occupation>Author</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation>University of St Andrews</affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">George Lillie Craik was the author of
<title>The New Zealanders</title>, which Dinah read as a child. He was the
father of Georgiana Craik and the uncle of Dinah's husband, also George Lillie
Craik. He took up a post in Ireland.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CraikDorothy" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Craik</surname>
<surname>Pilkington</surname>
<forename>Dorothy</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dorothy Craik was Dinah's adopted
daughter.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonAlexander" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Pilkington</surname>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>McDonnell</forename></persName>
<birth when="1863-05-17"/>
<death when="1930-01-30"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note resp="ParkerJanice">Alexander Pilkington was the first husband of Dinah's
daughter <persName ref="#CraikDorothy">Dorothy</persName>. The pair married in
<date when="1887">1887</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonFrederickNoel" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Paton</surname>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<forename>Noel</forename>
<forename>Waller</forename>
<forename>Ferrier</forename>
<addName>Fred</addName></persName>
<birth when="1861"/>
<death when="1914"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Explorer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Frederick Noel-Paton was the son of the
Craik's good friends the <orgName ref="#Paton">Noel-Patons</orgName>.
<!-- JP: source for dates: findagrave.com ALSO ADD WHICH WORKS OF DINAH'S HE ILLUSTRATED -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonMona" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Paton</surname>
<surname type="married">Kidston</surname>
<forename>Mona</forename>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
<forename>Noel</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1860-06-30"/>
<death when="1930-01-02"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Mona Paton was the eldest daughter of Noel
and Margaret Paton. She had a difficult adolescence, and came to stay with the
Craik's every spring for several years.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KidstonJack" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Kidston</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Wallace</forename>
<addName>Jack</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1851-03-22"/>
<death when="1926-06-20"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="BourrierKaren">Jack Kidston was husband to <persName
ref="#PatonMona">Mona Paton</persName>, and Vicar of Hampton Poyle, near
Oxford. Initially the couple was very happy but the marriage struggled when
Mona became a Theosophist, though the two remained married.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonDolly" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Cross</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Paton</surname>
<forename>Caroline</forename>
<forename>Aimile</forename>
<forename>Robertson</forename>
<forename>Noel</forename>
<addName>Dolly</addName></persName>
<birth when="1870"/>
<death when="1947"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Caroline Aimlie Cross, called Dolly, was the
daughter of the Craiks' good friends the <orgName ref="#Paton"
>Noel-Patons</orgName>.</note>
<!-- source for dates: findagrave.com -->
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonLora" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="maiden">Paton</surname>
<surname type="married">Moncrieff</surname>
<forename>Hamilton</forename>
<forename>Lorane</forename>
<forename>Noel</forename>
<addName>Lora</addName></persName>
<birth when="1868"/>
<death when="1921"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Lora Paton was the daughter of the Craiks'
good friends the <orgName ref="#Paton">Noel-Patons</orgName>.</note>
<!-- source for dates: findagrave.com -->
</person>
<person xml:id="CockerellOlive" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Cockerell</surname>
<forename>Olive</forename>
<forename>Juliet</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1868-09-13"/>
<death when="1910-07-24"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Author</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Olive Cockerell lived with the Craiks as a
companion for Dorothy in the 1870s. Her brother was <persName
ref="#CockerellSydney">Sydney Cockerell</persName> and <persName
ref="#HillOctavia">Octavia Hill</persName> was her godmother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CockerellSydney" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Cockerell</surname>
<forename>Sydney</forename>
<forename>Carlyle</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1867-07-16"/>
<death when="1962-05-01"/>
<occupation>Curator</occupation>
<affiliation>Fitzwilliam Museum</affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Sydney Cockerell, a book collector and
museum curator, was a friend of Dinah's. He was brother to <persName
ref="#CockerellOlive">Olive. ODNB.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CockerellSydneyJohn" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Cockerell</surname>
<forename>Sydney</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1842"/>
<death when="1877"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Sydney John Cockerell was <persName
ref="#CockerellSydney">Sydney Carlyle</persName> and <persName
ref="#CockerellOlive">Olive Cockerell</persName>'s father.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CockerellAlice" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Cockerell</surname>
<forename>Alice</forename>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
</persName>
<death when="1900"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Alice Elizabeth Cockerell was <persName
ref="#CockerellSydney">Sydney Carlyle</persName> and <persName
ref="#CockerellOlive">Olive Cockerell</persName>'s mother.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CockerellCharles">
<persName><surname>Cockerell</surname><forename>Charles</forename></persName>
<birth when="1755"/>
<death when="1837"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonStewart" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Henderson</surname>
<forename>James</forename>
<forename>Stewart</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1863"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Stewart Henderson, misnamed by Dinah in a
letter as "Stewart Anderson," was an acquaintance of Dinah's. Stewart was in a
secret relationship with <persName ref="#MeoCarmela">Carmela
Meo.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrahamLeonora" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="stage">Braham</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Abraham</surname>
<surname type="married">Barnes</surname>
<forename>Leonora</forename>
<forename>Lucy</forename>
<addName>Lily</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1853"/>
<death when="1931"/>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Leonora Braham was a Soprano famous for
several Gilbert and Sullivan roles, mentored by Craik, who tried to get her out
of acting.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarnesFrederick" sex="1">
<persName/>
<birth> </birth>
<death/>
<occupation>Actor?</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio">Frederick Barnes was the husband of Lily Barnes, who committed
suicide.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissRankin" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Rankin</surname>
<forename/>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Miss Rankin was a friend of Dinah's from
Wemyss Bay. A directory lists a Miss Rankin of Rothesay in 1857. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissNair" sex="2">
<persName>Miss W. Nair</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Miss Nair appears to be a friend of Dinah's
from Wemyss Bay.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Boyd" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Boyd</surname>
<forename/>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Boyd ppears to be a friend of Craik's from
Wemyss Bay, and an organist.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ThomsonAndrew" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Thomson</surname>
<forename>Andrew</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Andrew Thomson was a professor and friend
of Dinah's from Wemyss Bay.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Davidson" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Davidson</surname>
<forename/>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Davidson appears to be a friend of Craik's
from Wemyss Bay.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Annie" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Annie</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Annie was a domestic servant who followed
the Craiks from <placeName ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow</placeName> to <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName>, only to be married back in <placeName
ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow</placeName> soon after.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Oxland" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Oxland</surname>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren"><persName ref="#Oxland">Miss
Oxland</persName> was <persName ref="#CraikDorothy">Dorothy</persName> and
<persName ref="#CockerellOlive">Olive's</persName> governess.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Arnold" sex="1">
<persName>
<forename>Arnold</forename>
<surname/>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren"><persName ref="#Arnold">Arnold</persName>,
an acquaintance at <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> Mulock Aunt's house
in <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath</placeName>, appears to have been married to
<persName ref="#Gertrude">Gertrude</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Gertrude" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Gertrude</forename>
<surname/>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren"><persName ref="#Gertrude"
>Gertrude</persName>, an acquaintance at Craik's Mulock Aunt's house in
<placeName ref="#Bath">Bath</placeName>, appears to be married to <persName
ref="#Arnold">Arnold</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Holland" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname>Holland</surname>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Holland was an acquaintance of the Craiks,
possibly a neighbour at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Smith" sex="1">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname>Smith</surname>
<roleName>Doctor</roleName>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation/>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Smith was an acquaintance of the Craiks,
possibly a neighbour at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BewleyNed" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bewley</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>Dawson</forename>
<addName>Ned</addName></persName>
<birth when="1868-07-09"/>
<death when="1927-01-12"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Ned Bewley was a young acquaintance of the
<orgName ref="#Craik">Craiks</orgName>. He was a distant relative of Dinah's
and the son of Sir Edmund Thomas Bewley (1807–1908), who wrote the book "The
Family of Mulock."</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BewleyMay" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Bewley</surname>
<forename>Maria</forename>
<forename>Louisa</forename>
<addName>May</addName></persName>
<birth when="1871-06-03"/>
<death when="1883-12-30"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">May Bewley was a young acquaintance of the
<orgName ref="#Craik">Craiks</orgName> and the daughter of Sir Edmund Thomas
Bewley (1807–1908), who wrote the book "The Family of Mulock."</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Orrinsmith" sex="1">
<persName>
<forename>Harvey</forename>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<surname>Orrinsmith</surname>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Orrinsmith was an acquaintance of the
Craiks, possibly a neighbour at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OrrinSmithJohn" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Orrin</surname>
<surname>Smith</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1799"/>
<death when="1843-10-15"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>John Orrin Smith</persName> was
an English wood-engraver. He, along with his business partner <persName
ref="#LintonWJ">W. J. Linton</persName>, was one of the principal engravers
for the <title corresp="#IllustratedNews">Illustrated London News</title>
<date from="1836" to="1843">from 1836 to his death in 1843.</date> During this
time period, he changed his surname from Orrin Smith to
Orrinsmith.<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PaynJames" sex="1">
<persName>
<forename>James</forename>
<surname>Payn</surname>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">James Payn was a novelist and editor of the
<title ref="#Cornhill">Cornhill Magazine</title> from 1883 to 1896.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MeoCarmela">
<persName>
<surname>Meo</surname>
<forename>Carmela</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<note type="bio">Carmela Meo was a young Italian girl whom Dinah met in 1885. She
took up a subscription among her friends to have her placed at the <orgName
ref="#RoyalCollegeMusic"> Royal College of Music</orgName>. The relationship
ended poorly two years later when Carmela determined to marry a young man Dinah
found unsuitable.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MeoLuigi" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Meo</surname>
<forename>Luigi</forename></persName>
<birth when="1855"/>
<death when="1935"/>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Luigi Meo, a violinist and older brother of
<persName ref="#MeoCarmela">Carmela</persName>, was an acquaintance of
Dinah's. He married widow <persName ref="#HendersonJemima">Jemima Henderson
</persName>in <date when="1884">1884</date>; Jemima's son <persName
ref="#AndersonStewart"/>Stewart was in a secret relationship with <persName
ref="#MeoCarmela">Carmela</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WolleyH" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wolley</surname>
<forename>H. F.</forename>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio">Reverend Wolley was the Vicar of Shortlands Vicarage, Bromley,
Kent. He and his wife were close friends of the Craiks</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WolleyEmily" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Wolley</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<note type="bio">Mrs. Wolley was the wife of <persName ref="#WolleyH">Reverend
Wolley</persName> and a close friend of the Craiks.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LewesHarold">
<persName>
<forename>Harold</forename>
<surname>Lewes</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio">Henry Lewes was an acquaintance of Dinah's while she lived in the
<placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner House</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeConnie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Pike</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Constance</forename>
<addName>Connie</addName></persName>
<birth when="1858"/>
<death when="1937"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mary Constance Pike was a young person and
friend of Dinah's during her years at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>. She was the eldest sister of <persName ref="#PikeBel"
>Bel</persName> and <persName ref="#PikeAda">Ada</persName>. Connstance Pike
married Charles Thomas in 1891 and had two daughters, Constance Dinah and
Margaret Isabel.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeAda" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Pike</surname>
<forename>Ada</forename>
<forename>Violet</forename></persName>
<birth when="1865"/>
<death when="1933"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Ada Pike was a young person and friend of
Dinah's during her years at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>. Youngest sister of <persName ref="#PikeConnie"
>Connie</persName><persName ref="#PikeBel">Bel</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeBel" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Pike</surname>
<forename>Isabel</forename>
<addName>Bel</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1860"/>
<death when="1946"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Bel Pike was a young person and friend of
Dinah's during her years at the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>. She was the middle sister of <persName ref="#PikeConnie"
>Connie</persName><persName ref="#PikeAda">Ada Pike</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Bradway">
<persName><surname>Bradway</surname></persName>
<note type="bio">Mrs. Bradway was a seamstress who worked for the Craiks in the
1880s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Grubb">
<persName><surname>Grubb</surname></persName>
<note type="bio">Miss Grubb seems to be the Craiks hatmaker in the 1880s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="EastlakeMiss">
<persName><surname>Eastlake</surname></persName>
<birth when="1865"/>
<death when="1899"/>
<note type="bio">Miss Eastlake was a popular English actress and a leading lady in
Wilson Barrett's company. She started her own theater company, which went
bankrupt. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarrettWilson">
<persName><forename>Wilson</forename>
<surname>Barrett</surname></persName>
<birth when="1846"/>
<death when="1904"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Wilson Barrett was an actor and playwright
whom Dinah Craik struck up a correspondence with late in life. Barrett and Miss
Eastlake performed in Lord Lytton's classical drama <title>Junius, or the
Household Gods</title>, at the <placeName ref="#PrincessTheatre">Princess's
Theatre</placeName>, London, in February 1886. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="TennysonAlfred">
<persName><surname>Tennyson</surname>
<forename>Alfred</forename>
<roleName>Lord</roleName></persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lord Alfred Tennyson was a popular
English poet.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="TennysonHallam">
<persName><surname>Tennyson</surname>
<forename>Hallam</forename></persName>
<note type="bio">Hallam Tennyson was Lord Alfred Tennyson's son, named for his
friend Arthur Hallam.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AddeyHenryMarkinfield" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Addey</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
<forename>Markinfield</forename></persName>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality/>
<affiliation from="1845" to="1849">Employee of <orgName ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman
and Hall</orgName>.</affiliation>
<affiliation from="1849" to="1852">Partner in publishing company <orgName
ref="#CundallAddey">Cundall & Addey</orgName>.</affiliation>
<affiliation from="1852" to="1857">Proprietor of <orgName ref="#AddeyCo">Addey
& Co</orgName>.</affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Addey was a publisher of children's
literature. <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published "<title
ref="#Hero">A Hero</title>" with <orgName ref="#AddeyCo">Addey &
Co</orgName> and also wrote for <orgName ref="#AddeyCo">Addey &
Co</orgName>'s children's periodical <title ref="#Charm">The
Charm</title>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChapmanEdward" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chapman</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1804"/>
<death when="1880"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation from="1830" to="1864">Partner in publishing company <orgName
ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</orgName></affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Edward Chapman founded <orgName
ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</orgName> with <persName
ref="#HallWilliam">William Hall</persName> and worked with the company until
his retirement in <date when="1864">1864.</date></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CundallJoseph" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Cundall</surname>
<forename>Joseph</forename>
<addName type="pseudonym">Stephen Percy</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1818-09-22"/>
<death when="1895-01-10"/>
<occupation>Photographer, Author & Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation from="1849" to="1868">Partner in publishing company <orgName
ref="#CundallAddey">Cundall & Addey</orgName>.</affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Cundall was a successful photographer
and a publisher of children's literature. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HallWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hall</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth notBefore="1800" notAfter="1802">Between 1800 and 1802</birth>
<death when="1847">1847</death>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation from="1830" to="1847">Partner in publishing company <orgName
ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</orgName></affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Hall founded <orgName
ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</orgName> with <persName
ref="#ChapmanEdward">Edward Chapman</persName> and worked with the company
until his sudden death in <date when="1847">1847.</date></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HerveyThomasKibble" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hervey</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<forename>Kibble</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1799-02-11"/>
<death when="1859-02-17"/>
<occupation>Poet</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<nationality/>
<affiliation from="1846-05-23" to="1853">Editor of <title ref="Athenaeum">the
Athenaeum</title></affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Thomas Kibble Hervey was a poet, critic,
and journalist who contributed to and later edited the popular periodical
<title ref="Athenaeum">the Athenaeum</title>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HowittMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Howitt</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Botham</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1799-03-12"/>
<death when="1888-01-30"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mary Howitt was a popular Victorian
writer who published both independently and collaboratively with her husband
<persName ref="#HowittWilliam">William Howitt</persName>. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HowittWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Howitt</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1792-12-18"/>
<death when="1879-03-03"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<affiliation from="1847" to="1848">Proprietor of <title ref="HowittsJournal"
>Howitt's Journal</title></affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Howitt was a popular Victorian
writer who published both independently and collaboratively with his wife
<persName ref="#HowittMary">Mary Howitt</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MorrisJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Morris</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Burden</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1839-10-19"/>
<death when="1914-01-26"/>
<occupation>Embroiderer</occupation>
<occupation>Artist's Model</occupation>
<nationality/>
<affiliation>Pre-Rafaelite Brotherhood</affiliation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Morris was a skilled embroiderer who
bound some of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName>'s books. She was a
model and muse for both her husband <persName ref="#MorrisWilliam">William
Morris</persName>, and <persName ref="#RosettiDanteGabriel">Dante Gabriel
Rosetti.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MorrisWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Morris</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1834-03-24"/>
<death when="1896-10-03"/>
<occupation>Designer</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality/>
<affiliation>Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood</affiliation>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Morris was a British poet, novelist, and
textile designer.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MorrisMrs" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Morris</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Mrs. Morris was an acquaintance of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik's</persName> in the early 1850s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChisholmMrs" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Chisholm</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren">Mrs. Chisholm was an acquaintance of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik's</persName> in the <date from="1850"
to="1855">early 1850s.</date>
<!--KF: There's a possibility this might be the wife of William Chisholm and mother of Dinah's friend Helen Brodie. In which case, her maiden name is Helen Henderson. Ancestry.--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OliphantMargaret" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Oliphant</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
<forename>Oliphant</forename>
<forename>Wilson</forename>
<addName>Mrs. Oliphant</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1828-04-04"/>
<death when="1897-06-25"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Oliphant was a best-selling
Victorian novelist and a life long friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah
Craik</persName>'s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonAllanPark">
<persName><surname>Paton</surname>
<forename>Allan</forename>
<forename>Park</forename></persName>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Librarian</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Allan Park Paton was best known for
editing the Hamnet Shakespeare, published between <date notBefore="1877"
notAfter="1879">1877 and 1879</date>. He worked at the <placeName
ref="#Greenock">Greenock</placeName> Library, Watt Monument.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RosettiDanteGabriel" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Rossetti</surname>
<forename>Dante</forename>
<forename>Gabriel</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1828-05-12"/>
<death when="1882-04-09"/>
<occupation>Painter</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Italian</nationality>
<affiliation>Pre-Rafaelite Brotherhood</affiliation>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dante Gabriel Rossetti was a famous poet and a
painter of the Pre-Rafaelite brotherhood.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissAdams" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Adams</surname>
</persName>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Miss Adams was a composer. She delivered
a song to Dinah by mail sometime <date notBefore="1859" notAfter="1865">between
1859 and 1865</date>.<lb/>
<!-- "Sir G. MacFarren on English Music," <hi rend="italic">Musical Standard</hi>
(London, UK), June 7, 1884. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsBrougham" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Brougham</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Brougham was a friend of <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName> and <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah
Craik</persName>'s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrowningPen" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Browning</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename>
<forename>Wiedeman</forename>
<forename>Barrett</forename>
<addName>Pen</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1849-03-09"/>
<death when="1912-07-08"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Pen Browning was the son of <persName
ref="#BrowningRobert">Robert Browning</persName> and <persName
ref="#BrowningElizabethBarrett">Elizabeth Barrett Browning</persName> ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- De L. Ryals, Clyde, "Browning Robert (1812-1889)," ODNB. -->
<!-- "Obituary: Mr. Barrett Browning," <hi rend="italics">Times</hi> (London, UK), Jul. 09, 1912. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChalmersThomas" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chalmers</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1780-03-17"/>
<death when="1847-05-31"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Reverend Dr. Thomas Chalmers served as
the leader of the Church of Scotland and later established the Free Church of
Scotland. He was an important and well-known religious figure in the nineteenth
century. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissChalmers" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Miss Chalmers was a friend of <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName> and <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah
Craik</persName>'s, and niece to the <persName ref="#ChalmersThomas"
>Reverend Dr. Thomas Chalmers</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CharlesElizabeth" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Charles</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Rundle</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1828-01-02"/>
<death when="1896-03-28"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Elizabeth Rundle Charles was a popular
Victorian poet and novelist. She lived with her husband in <placeName
ref="Hampstead">Hampstead</placeName> from <date when="1851">1851</date>
until her death in <date when="1896">1896</date>. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DuplessisGeorges" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Gratet-Duplessis</surname>
<forename>Georges</forename>
<forename>Victor</forename>
<forename>Antoine</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1834-03-19"/>
<death when="1899-03-26"/>
<occupation>Curator</occupation>
<nationality>French</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Duplessis was a French curator and
art historian who specialized in the art of engraving. An anonymous note on
letter PU34 (AM20763) in the Princeton Parrish Collection suggests that Dinah
Craik may have helped translate his text "<title
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#WondersofEngraving">The Wonders of Engraving</title>."<lb/>
<!-- Sorensen, Lee "[Gratet-]Duplessis, Georges Victor Antoine," <hi rend="italics">Dictionary of Art Historians</hi>. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsField" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Field</surname>
</persName>
<occupation cert="low">Education</occupation>
<note type="bio" cert="low" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Field was an acquaintance
of Dinah's who helped her to organize a glee club. Mrs. Field may have been
Mrs. Julia Field, the owner and proprietor of the <orgName
ref="#CatharineLodge">Catharine Lodge School for Young Ladies</orgName> in
<placeName ref="#Brompton">Brompton</placeName>, <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>.<lb/>
<!-- Dare, Deirdre and Melissa Hardie, "Appendix II: Biographical Register of Charles Johns's Primary Circle of Colleagues, Friends & Family Mentioned in the Text," <hi rend="italics">A Passion for Nature: 19th-century Naturalism in the Circle of Charles Alexander Johns</hi> (Penzance CON: Patten Press, 2008), 193-194. -->
<!-- "Education.— Catherine Lodge," <hi rend="italics">Times</hi> (London, UK), Mar. 5, 1851. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GoldsmidAnnaMaria" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Goldsmid</surname>
<forename>Anna</forename>
<forename>Maria</forename></persName>
<birth when="1805-09-17"/>
<death when="1889-02-08"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Jewish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Anna Maria Goldsmid was an important
figure in the Anglo-Jewish community of the nineteenth century. She devoted
most of her adult life to the improvement of Jewish medical and educational
institutions in <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrHarry" sex="1">
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Harry appears to have be an early
photographer who might have developed photographs of Dinah Craik.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HarperJosephWesley" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Harper</surname>
<forename>Joseph</forename>
<forename>Wesley</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Joseph Wesley Harper was a partner in the
American publishing firm <orgName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Harpers">Harper &
Brothers</orgName>. Joseph Wesley was the third Harper brother and joined
the firm in <date when="1823">1823</date>.<lb/>
<!-- Stovall, James Glen "Fletcher Harper (31 January 1806-29 May 1877)" <hi rend="italic"
>American Magazine Journalists, 1850-1900</hi> 79 (1989): 174-181. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HarperFletcher" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Harper</surname>
<forename>Fletcher</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1806-01-31"/>
<death when="1877-05-29"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Fletcher Harper was a partner in the
American publishing firm <orgName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Harpers">Harper &
Brothers</orgName>. Fletcher was the youngest of the four Harper brothers
and joined the firm in <date when="1825">1825</date>.<lb/>
<!-- Stovall, James Glen "Fletcher Harper (31 January 1806-29 May 1877)" <hi rend="italic"
>American Magazine Journalists, 1850-1900</hi> 79 (1989): 174-181. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HillAmeliaRobertson" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Hill</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Paton</surname>
<forename>Amelia</forename>
<forename>Robertson</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1821-01-15"/>
<death when="1904-07-05"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Amelia Robertson Hill was <persName
ref="#PatonJosephNoel">Sir Joseph Noel Paton</persName>'s sister. She is
best-known for her work in sculpture, but began her career as a painter. Dinah
Craik was one of her sitters <date notBefore="1844" notAfter="1845">c.
1844</date>. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- NPG 2544 and 2544a. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HillDavidOctavius" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hill</surname>
<forename>David</forename>
<forename>Octavius</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1802-05-20"/>
<death when="1870-05-17"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">David Octavius Hill was married to
<persName ref="#HillAmeliaRobertson">Amelia Robertson Hill (née
Paton)</persName>, a friend of Dinah Craik's. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JesusChrist" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Jesus</forename>
<addName>Jesus Christ</addName>
<addName>Jesus of Nazareth</addName></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Jesus Christ is one of the central
figures of Christianity.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KingsleyCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Kingsley</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1819-06-12"/>
<death when="1875-01-23"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Charles Kingsley was a Christian
socialist, a university professor, and a celebrated novelist. He and Dinah
Craik were literary acquaintances. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KingsleyFanny" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Kingsley</surname>
<forename>Frances</forename>
<forename>Eliza</forename>
<addName>Fanny</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1814"/>
<death when="1891-12-12"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Fanny Kingsley was wife to <persName
ref="#KingsleyCharles">Charles Kingsley</persName>. She authored her
husband's biography after his death in <date when="1875">1875</date>.
ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsLongstaff" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Longstaff</surname>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Longstaff was a friend of Dinah's
from <placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName>.</note>
</persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="LovellGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lovell</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1804"/>
<death when="1878-05-13"/>
<!-- <occupation>Secretary</occupation> -->
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George William Lovell was a popular
Victorian dramatist. He was an early acquaintance of <persName
ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas Mulock</persName>'s and a friend of <persName
ref="DMC">Dinah Craik</persName>'s. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Mitchell, Sally, <hi rend="italics">Dinah Mulock Craik</hi> (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983), 5. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LovellMaria" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Lovell</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Lacy</surname>
<forename>Maria</forename>
<forename>Ann</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1803-07-15"/>
<death when="1877-04-02"/>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Maria Ann Lovell was an actress turned
playwright. She and her husband <persName ref="#LovellGeorge">George
Lovell</persName> were friends with <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah
Craik</persName> and were also acquainted with her father, <persName
ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas Mulock</persName>. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Mitchell, Sally, <hi rend="italics">Dinah Mulock Craik</hi> (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983), 5. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LovellMinna" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Lovell</surname>
<forename>Maria</forename>
<forename>Ann</forename>
<addName>Marian</addName>
<addName>Minna</addName></persName>
<birth when="1832-09-06">6 September 1832</birth>
<death when="1822-04-29">29 April 1822</death>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Minna Lovell was a friend of Dinah's who
lived with her at <placeName ref="#Lynover">Lynover Cottage</placeName>. She
was briefly engaged to Dinah's brother <persName ref="#MulockBenjamin"
>Benjamin</persName>
<date notBefore="1860" notAfter="1863" precision="high">from around 1860 to
1863.</date><lb/>
<!-- Foster, Shirley, "Dinah Mulock Craik," <hi rend="italics">Victorian Women's Fiction: Marriage, Freedom and the Individual</hi> (New York: Routeledge, 2012), 50. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MarstonCicely" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Marston</surname>
<forename>Cicely</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1846"/>
<death when="1878"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Cicely Marston was the first child of
Dinah's close friends <persName ref="#MarstonWestland">John Westland
Marston</persName> and <persName ref="MarstonEleanor">Eleanor
Marston</persName>. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Latané D. E. Jr. "Marston, John Westland (1819-1890)," ODNB. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MontaguLordRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Montagu</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1825-01-24"/>
<death when="1902-05-06"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lord Robert Montagu was a Conservative
politician and a religious controversialist. He was a professional acquaintance
of <persName ref="#KingsleyCharles">Charles Kingsley</persName>'s. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OShaughnessyArthur" sex="1">
<persName><surname>O'Shaughnessy</surname>
<forename>Arthur</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1844-03-14"/>
<death when="1881-01-30"/>
<occupation/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Arthur O'Shaughnessy was married to
Eleanor Marston, the youngest daughter of Dinah's close friends <persName
ref="#MarstonWestland">John Westland Marston</persName> and <persName
ref="MarstonEleanor">Eleanor Marston</persName>. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OShaughnessyEleanor" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">O'Shaughnessy</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Marston</surname>
<forename>Eleanor</forename>
<forename>Kyme</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1848"/>
<death when="1879"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Eleanor (Marston) O'Shaughnessy was the
second child of Dinah's close friends <persName ref="#MarstonWestland">John
Westland Marston</persName> and <persName ref="MarstonEleanor">Eleanor
Marston</persName>. ODNB.</note>
<!-- Latané D. E. Jr. "Marston, John Westland (1819-1890)," ODNB. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ParkerJohnWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Parker</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1792"/>
<death when="1870-05-18"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>John William Parker</persName>
was the owner and proprietor of the publishing firm <orgName
ref="#ParkerAndSon">John W. Parker & Son</orgName>. John W. Parker &
Son acquired <title corresp="#Frasers">Fraser's Magazine for Town and
Country</title> in <date when="1847">1847</date> and published some of Dinah
Craik's earliest stories. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Mitchell, Sally, "Chronology," <hi rend="italics">Dinah Mulock Craik</hi> (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983). -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ParkerJohnWilliamJr" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Parker</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1820"/>
<death when="1860"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>John William Parker</persName>
was an English publisher and the son in <orgName ref="#ParkerAndSon">Parker
& Son</orgName> publishing. He joined his father's firm in <date
when="1843">1843</date> and worked as the general manager until his death in
<date when="1860">1860</date>. <orgName ref="#ParkerAndSon">Parker &
Son</orgName> published some of Dinah Craik's earliest stories. ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Mitchell, Sally, "Chronology," <hi rend="italics">Dinah Mulock Craik</hi> (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983). -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissShirley" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Shirley</forename></persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Miss Shirley wrote the lyrics to a piece
of music that Dinah had in her possession <date notBefore="1858"
notAfter="1860">c. 1859</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="TaylorHarry" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Taylor</surname>
<forename>Harry</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Harry Taylor was a tenor in Dinah
Craik's glee club <date notBefore="1862" notAfter="1863">c.1862</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ThackerayWilliamMakepeace" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Thackeray</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Makepeace</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1811-07-18"/>
<death when="1863-12-23"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Makepeace Thackeray was a popular
Victorian writer best-known for his satirical novels, including <title
corresp="#VanityFair">Vanity Fair</title>. ODNB.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="StewartMichaelShaw" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Shaw-Stewart</surname>
<forename>Michael</forename>
<forename>Robert</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1826-11-26"/>
<death when="1903-12-10"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Sir Michael Shaw Stewart was a British
baronet and was a Member of Parliament for <placeName ref="Renfrewshire"
>Renfrewshire</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Scotland"
>Scotland.</placeName><lb/> "Obituary: Sir Michael Shaw-Stewart," <hi
rend="italics">Times</hi> (London, UK), Dec. 11, 1903. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GrosvenorLadyOctavia" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Grosvenor</surname>
<forename>Octavia</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1829-09-22"/>
<death when="1921-05-29"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lady Octavia Grosvenor was married to
<persName ref="#ShawStewartMichael">Sir Michael Shaw-Stewart</persName>. She
was the granddaughter of <persName ref="#LevesonGowerGeorge">George
Leveson-Gower</persName>.<lb/> "Obituary: Sir Michael Shaw-Stewart," <hi
rend="italics">Times</hi> (London, UK), Dec. 11, 1903. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GowerGeorgeLeveson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Leveson-Gower</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Granville</forename>
<roleName>First Duke of Sutherland</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1758-01-09"/>
<death when="1833-07-19"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Leveson-Gower was a wealthy and
controversial Anglo-Scottish politician. He was the second Marquess of
<placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Stafford">Stafford</placeName> and the
first Duke of <placeName ref="#Sutherland">Sutherland.</placeName><lb/> ODNB.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GowerGeorgeLevesonII" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Leveson-Gower</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Granville</forename>
<roleName>Second Duke of Sutherland</roleName>
<roleName>Earl of Sutherland</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1786-08-08"/>
<death when="1861-02-27"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Scottish</nationality>
<affiliation/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>George
Sutherland-Leveson-Gower</persName> was a Whig politician and the eldest son
of <persName ref="#GowerGeorgeLeveson">the first Duke of Sutherland.</persName>
He inherited his Earlship from his mother's side after her death in <date
when="1839">1839.</date><lb/> ODNB. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AdderleyCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Adderley</surname>
<surname>Bowyer</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1814-08-02"/>
<death when="1905-03-28"/>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Adderley, first Baron Norton, was the
founder of the <orgName ref="#SaltleyReformatory">Saltley
Reformatory</orgName>— an industrial school in which Dinah's father <persName
ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas Mulock</persName> took a great interest.<lb/>
ODNB.<lb/> Mulock Thomas, "Notes re industrial schools: Saltley Reformatory
printed Letter to the Earl of Lichfield," 1860-1894, D615/PL/6/26, Records of
the Anson Family of Shugborough, Earls of Lichford; Staffordshire County Record
Office, Stoke-on-Trent Archive Service.
<!-- http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/6a3ac300-7ae0-4ddf-87b4-decc9b335eb7 --></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BentleyEdward" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bentley</surname>
<forename>Edward</forename></persName>
<birth when="1753"/>
<death/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Edward Bentley was a London publisher and
the proprietor of <orgName ref="#Bentley">Bentley & Co.</orgName>
ODNB.</note>
<!-- Patten, Robert L., "Richard Bentley (1794-1871),"
ODNB. <lb/>Anderson, Patricia J. and Jonathan Rose, eds., "Richard
Bentley," <hi rend="italics">British Literary Publishing Houses,
1820-1880</hi> 106, (Detroit: Gale, 1991), 39-52. DLB 106.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="BentleyGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bentley</surname>
<forename>George</forename></persName>
<birth when="1826-06-07"/>
<death when="1895-05-29"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Bentley was the son of <persName
ref="#BentleyRichard">Richard Bentley</persName>. He became a partner in his
father's publishing company in <date when="1845">1845</date> and later shared
the business with his own son. ODNB. </note>
<!-- Anderson, Patricia J. and Jonathan Rose, eds.,
"Richard Bentley," <hi rend="italics">British Literary Publishing
Houses, 1820-1880</hi> 106, (Detroit: Gale, 1991), 39-52. DLB 106.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="BentleyRichard" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bentley</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename></persName>
<birth when="1794-10-24"/>
<death when="1871-11-10"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Richard Bentley was the son of <persName
ref="#BentleyEdward">Edward Bentley</persName>. He was a well-known
publisher in <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> throughout his
lifetime. ODNB.</note>
<!-- Anderson, Patricia J. and
Jonathan Rose, eds., "Richard Bentley," <hi rend="italics">British
Literary Publishing Houses, 1820-1880</hi> 106, (Detroit: Gale,
1991), 39-52. DLB 106. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ChambersRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chambers</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1802-07-10"/>
<death when="1871-03-17"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Robert Chambers was a partner in the
publishing company <orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers.</orgName>
Dinah often visited his residence at <placeName ref="#DouneTerrace">Doune
Terrace</placeName> in <placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh's Georgian New
Town.</placeName> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChambersWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chambers</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1800-04-16"/>
<death when="1883-05-20"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Chambers was a partner in the
publishing company <orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers.</orgName>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Clara" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Clara</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Clara was presumably one of Dinah's
friends from her time at Wildwood. She accompanied Dinah on a journey to
Glasgow sometime between <date notBefore="1861" notAfter="1865">1861 and
1865</date>.</note>
<!-- Clara is mentioned in PU45 in the Princeton Parrish Collection. KB: I'm wondering if she's actually a servant if she's mentioned by first name here.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissCoates" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Coates</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Miss Coates was a cousin of <persName
ref="#DobellSydney">Sydney Dobell</persName>'s. She lived at <placeName
ref="#UpperTerraceLodge">Upper Terrace Lodge</placeName> with her friend
<persName ref="#MissJames">Miss Marian James.</persName><lb/> "Donations for
the Bow and Poplar Charity Organisation Committees," <hi rend="italics">Reports
of the Council and of the District Committees,</hi> (Charity Organisation
Society, London, 1887): 22.<lb/> “David Gray’s First Proof-Sheet,” <hi
rend="italics">The Irish Monthly</hi> 15, (1887): 425.<lb/> James
Hedderwick, ed., “Memoir of the Author,” <hi rend="italics">Poems of David
Gray, with Memoirs of His Life</hi>, (Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1865):
36-37. <lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DickensCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Dickens</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Huffman</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1812-02-07"/>
<death when="1870-06-09"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Charles Dickens is English novelist who
is still widely read and celebrated in the twenty-first century. He is known
for his astute criticisms of Victorian social conditions in novels such as
<title>Bleak House</title>. ODNB</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FairholtFrederickWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Fairholt</surname>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1813-07-18"/>
<death when="1866-04-03"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Prussian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frederick William Fairholt was a
successful artist and antiquary who regularly contributed to the <title
corresp="#ArtJournal">Art Journal</title>. ODNB. <lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="IronsWilliamJosiah" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Irons</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Josiah</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1812-09-12"/>
<death when="1883-06-18"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Josiah Irons was a Church of
England clergyman. Dinah might have encountered him during his residency at St.
Paul's Cathedral (<date from="1860" to="1870">1860 to 1870</date>).
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissJames" sex="2">
<persName><surname>James</surname>
<forename>Marian</forename>
<forename>Julia</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Marian James was a friend of Dinah's and
an acquaintance of the <orgName ref="#Dobell">Dobell</orgName> family. Miss
James lodged at <placeName ref="#UpperTerraceLodge">Upper Terrace
Lodge</placeName>, <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead</placeName>
with <persName ref="#MissCoates">Miss Coates</persName>— a cousin of <persName
ref="DobellSydney">Sydney Dobell</persName>'s.<lb/> “David Gray’s First
Proof-Sheet,” <hi rend="italics">The Irish Monthly</hi> 15, (1887): 425.<lb/>
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, “List of Publications: Sampson Low, Son, and Co,”
<hi rend="italics">Right at Last, and Other Tales</hi>, (London: Sampson
Low, Son & Co., 1860): 333.<lb/> "A History of West Down, Hindhead GU26
6BQ," <hi rend="italics">Grayshott Village Archive,</hi> last modified February
6, 2012.<lb/> James Hedderwick, ed., “Memoir of the Author,” <hi rend="italics"
>Poems of David Gray, with Memoirs of His Life</hi>, (Boston: Roberts
Brothers, 1865): 36-37. <lb/> Marian James, <hi rend="italics">A Lord of the
Creation</hi>, (London: Groombridge & Sons, 1857): 1. <lb/> “Miss Marian
Julia James, Deceased,” <hi rend="italics">The London Gazette</hi> 28448, (20
December, 1910): 9500.<lb/> Samuel Halkett, ed., <hi rend="italics">Dictionary
of Anonymous and Pseudononymous English Literature</hi> 3, (New York:
Haskell House, 1926-1934): 401. Web.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LoudonJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Loudon</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Webb</surname>
<persName>Jane</persName></persName>
<birth when="1807"/>
<death when="1858"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Loudon was a writer specializing in
botany and natural history. She was the first editor of the <title>Ladies'
Companion at Home and Abroad</title> from <date from="1849" to="1851">1849
to 1851,</date> during which time she became well-known for her work on
middle-class women’s publications. Dinah was well-aquainted with Mrs. Loudon
when she was living at <placeName ref="#CamdenStreet">Camden Street</placeName>
in the 1840s. <lb/> Camilla [Toulmin] Newton Crosland, Landmarks of a Literary
Life 1820–1892 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1893), 134.<lb/>Laurel Brake
and Marysa Demoor, eds. Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great
Britain and Ireland (Gent: Academia P, 2009), 379–340.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=qVrUTUelE6YC&lpg=PP1&dq=Dictionary%20of%20Nineteenth-century%20Journalism%20Laurel%20Brake&pg=PA379#v=onepage&q=Loudon&f=false -->
ODNB. <lb/>
<!-- Lohrli, Anne, "Agnes Loudon," <hi rend="italics">Dickens Jornals Online</hi>,
last modified 1971. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Louis" sex="1">
<!-- PU42 in the Princeton Parrish Collection is addressed to Louis --></person>
<person xml:id="Lutzow" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lützow</surname>
<forename>Ludwig</forename>
<forename>Adolf</forename>
<forename>Wilheim</forename></persName>
<birth when="1782"/>
<death when="1834"/>
<nationality>Prussian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lützow was a Prussian soldier famous for
leading the volunteer corps in the War of Liberation.<lb/>"Lützow, Adolf,
Baron," <hi rend="italics">The New International Encyclopædia</hi>,
1905.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ShakespeareWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Shakespeare</surname>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1564"/>
<death when="1616"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Shakespeare is widely regarded as
the world's preeminent English dramatist. He is best known for his innovations
in theatre and for his re-workings of the English sonnet. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsValentine" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Valentine</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Jewry</surname>
<forename>Laura</forename>
<forename>Belinda</forename>
<forename>Charlotte</forename>
<addName>Aunt Louisa</addName></persName>
<birth when="1815-02-15"/>
<death when="1899"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Valentine</persName>,
otherwise known by her maiden name Laura Jewry or her pseudonym Aunt Louisa,
was a writer of children's fiction. <persName>Dinah</persName> introduced her
to <orgName ref="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</orgName> on behalf of her
acquaintance <persName ref="#RitchieLeitch">Leitch Ritchie</persName>, <date
when="1851" precision="medium">c. 1851.</date><lb/> "Valentine, L. (Laura),
1814-1899," <hi rend="italics">Library of Congress Name Authority File,</hi>
accessed Aug. 1, 2015. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81149497.html<lb/>
WM. H. Peet, "Laura Jewry, Afterwards Mrs. R. Valentine" <hi rend="italics"
>Notes & Queries</hi> 11S-XII, (1915): 266.<lb/>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WaddingtonRichard" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Waddington</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename></persName>
<birth when="1833"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Richard Waddington was an acquaintance of
Dinah's who attended the <orgName ref="#UniversityOfOxford">University of
Oxford</orgName> from <date from="1862" to="1867">1862 to 1867</date>.
According to Dinah, he was "a first rate German scholar" with an excellent work
ethic.<lb/>Foster, Joseph, <hi rend="italics">Alumni Oxoniensis: The Members of
the University of Oxford 1715-1886</hi> 4 (1888): 1478.</note>
<!-- Richard is mentioned in PU55 in the Princeton Parrish Collection. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="WillsJanet" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Wills</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Chambers</surname>
<forename>Janet</forename></persName>
<birth when="1812"/>
<death when="1892"/>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Janet Wills (née Chambers) was the
youngest sister of the publishing duo <persName ref="#ChambersWilliam"
>William</persName> and <persName ref="#ChambersRobert">Robert
Chambers</persName>. She married the successful journalist <persName
ref="#WillsWilliamHenry">William Henry Wills</persName> in <date when="1846"
>1846</date>. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WillsWilliamHenry" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wills</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Henry</forename></persName>
<birth when="1810-01-13"/>
<death when="1880-09-01"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Henry Wills was a successful
journalist and journal editor. He was one of the original contributers to
<title corresp="#Punch">Punch</title> and was an assistant editor for <title
corresp="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title>.
ODNB</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChambersAnne" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Chambers</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Kirkwood</surname>
<forename>Anne</forename></persName>
<birth when="1808"/>
<death when="1863"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Anne Chambers was the first wife of the
publisher <persName ref="#ChambersRobert">Robert Chambers.</persName>
ODNB.</note>
<!-- Sondra Miley Cooney, "Chambers, Robert
(1802-1871)," ODNB.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="ChapmanMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Chapman</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Whiting</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename></persName>
<birth when="1820" precision="low"/>
<death/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mary Chapman was married to the publisher
<persName ref="#ChapmanEdward">Edward Chapman</persName> of <orgName
ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall.</orgName> ODNB.</note>
<!-- Robert L. Patten,
"Chapman Edward (1804-1880)," ODNB.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrGuild" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Guild</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Guild was the proprietor of
<placeName ref="#RoseCottage">Rose Cottage</placeName> in <placeName
ref="#Amberley">Amberley</placeName>. Dinah lodged with the Guild family
sometime in the <date notBefore="1854" notAfter="1856">mid 1850</date>s. She
wrote the first chapter of <title>John Halifax, Gentleman</title>, there.<lb/>
Diana Wall, "People of the Past: Dinah Maria Craik (née Mulock) (1826-1827),"
<hi rend="italics">Stroud District Council,</hi> accessed Aug. 1,
2015.</note>
<!--See PU66 in the Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsGuild" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Guild</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Guild was married to <placeName
ref="#MrGuild">Mr. Guild</placeName>, the proprietor of <placeName
ref="#RoseCottage">Rose Cottage.</placeName></note>
<!--See PU66 in the Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="HarrisonLucy" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Harrison</surname>
<forename>Lucy</forename>
</persName>
<!-- See PU74 in the Princeton Parrish Collection -->
<!-- The Lucy Harrison that Dinah addresses in PU74 might have been the daughter of Daniel and Anna (Botham) Harrison— elder sister of Mary (Botham) Howitt. -->
<!-- See Amy Greener, <hi rend="italics">A Lover of Books: The Life and Literary Papers of Lucy Harrison</hi> (London: J. M. Dent & Sons, 1916). https://archive.org/stream/loverofbookslife00gree#page/n9/mode/2up.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="HooperJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Hooper</surname>
<surname>Winnard</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1907"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah and Jane Winnard Hooper were
friends and fellow writers. Jane was cousin to <orgName ref="#Craik">the
Craiks</orgName> in <placeName ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow</placeName>.<lb/>
Charlotte Mitchell, Ellen Jordan and Helen Schinske, eds., "Jane Margaret
(Winnard) Hooper," <hi rend="italics">Letters of Charlotte Mary Yonge
(1823-1901),</hi> accessed July 22, 2015.
http://www.yongeletters.com/people?person=711 </note>
<!-- Dinah Maria Mulock Craik, "Autograph letter signed: place not
specified, to [Frederic] Chapman, 1854 Apr. 6.," <hi rend="italics"
>Archive Grid</hi>, accessed July 22, 2015.
http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/879478539. <!-\- See Morgan24 in the Pierpont Morgan Library Collection-\->
John McGivering and John Radcliffe, "Mary Kingsley," <hi
rend="italics">The New Readers' Guide to the works of Rudyard
Kipling</hi>, last modified Nov. 13, 2009.
http://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/rg_kingsley1.htm.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="KeanCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Kean</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1811-01-18"/>
<death when="1868-01-22"/>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Charles Kean was a popular
nineteenth-century actor and manager of <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>'s <placeName ref="#PrincessTheatre">Princess's
Theatre</placeName>
<date from="1850" to="1859">from 1850-1859.</date> He was best-known for his
work in Victorian Shakespeare revivals. ODNB.</note>
<!-- M. Glen Wilson, "Charles Kean's Production of 'Richard II'," <hi rend="italics"
>Educational Theatre Journal</hi> 19, no. 1 (1967): 41-51.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrLamont" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lamont</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Lamont and his wife were friends of
Dinah's. She met them while lodging with <persName ref="#PatonAllanPark">Allan
Park Paton</persName> at <placeName ref="#Greenock">Greenock</placeName> in
<date when="1849">1849.</date></note>
<!-- PU73 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsLamont" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Lamont</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Lamont and her husband were friends
of Dinah's. She met them while lodging with <persName ref="#PatonAllanPark"
>Allan Park Paton</persName> at <placeName ref="#Greenock"
>Greenock</placeName> in <date when="1849">1849.</date></note>
<!-- PU73 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="LamontTom" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lamont</surname>
<forename>Tom</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Tom Lamont was one of <persName
ref="#MrLamont">Mr.</persName> and <persName ref="#MrsLamont">Mrs.
Lamont</persName>'s two sons.</note>
<!-- PU73 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="LanziLuigi" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lanzi</surname>
<forename>Luigi</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1732-06-14"/>
<death when="1810-03-30"/>
<occupation>Scholar <!-- Occupation not in codebook --></occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Luigi Lanzi was a historian of classical
and renaissance Italian art. Dinah appears to have been researching Lanzi and
other art historians around <date when="1846">1846.</date><lb/> Shearjashub
Spooner, <hi rend="italics">A Biographical History of the Fine Arts</hi> II.— M
to Z, (Philadelphia: George Gebbie, 1873).
https://archive.org/details/abiographicalhi04spoogoog. <lb/> Sorensen, Lee
"Lanzi, Luigi [Antonio] (Abate)," <hi rend="italics">Dictionary of Art
Historians,</hi> accessed Aug. 2, 2015.
https://dictionaryofarthistorians.org/lanzil.htm.</note>
<!-- KB: This research was likely for her story Elisabetta Siriani or for Rembrandt's Sister, which both appeared in Chamber's publications around this time -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MartinFrances" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Martin</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Anne</forename>
<forename>Frances</forename>
<addName>Fanny</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829-04-19"/>
<death when="1922-03-13"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frances (Fanny) Martin was a lifelong
friend of Dinah Craik's. They lodged together during the summer of 1850 after
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben Mulock</persName> left for <placeName
ref="#Australia">Australia.</placeName> Frances helped found the College of
Women (1874-1967), which was renamed The Frances Martin College after her
death. ODNB.</note>
<!-- Mitchell, Sally, <hi rend="italics">Dinah Mulock Craik</hi> (Boston:
Twayne Publishers, 1983), 10.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MacmillanFrances" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Macmillan</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Orridge</surname>
<forename>Frances</forename>
<forename>Eliza</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1821"/>
<death when="1867"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frances Macmillan was married to the
publisher, <persName ref="#MacmillanDaniel">Daniel Macmillan.</persName>
ODNB.</note>
<!-- Rosemary T. Van Arsdel, "Macmillan family
(per. c. 1840-1986)," ODNB.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MacmillanCaroline" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Macmillan</surname>
<forename>Caroline</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1823"/>
<death when="1871"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Caroline Macmillan was married to the
publisher, <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander Macmillan.</persName>
ODNB.</note>
<!-- Rosemary T. Van Arsdel, "Macmillan family
(per. c. 1840-1986)," ODNB."Macmillan, Caroline Brimley," <hi rend="italics">Find a Grave,</hi> accessed July 29, 2015. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gsr&GSln=MacMillan&GSiman=1&GSst=4220& -->
</person>
<person xml:id="NewbyThomasCautley" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Newby</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<forename>Cautley</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1797-12-26"/>
<death when="1882-06-14"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Thomas Cautley Newby was a successful
English publisher best-known for publishing the first works by Emily and Ann
Brontë, <title>Wuthering Heights</title> and <title>Agnes Grey</title>.<lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OrrWilliamSomerville" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Orr</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Somerville</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death when="1871"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Somerville Orr was the head of
the publishing company <orgName ref="#OrrCo">Wm. S. Orr &
Co.</orgName><lb/> William Somerville Orr, <hi rend="italics">Orr's Circle of
the Sciences,</hi> (London: Wm. S. Orr & Co, 1854).</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonMatthew" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Pilkington</surname>
<forename>Matthew</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1701"/>
<death when="1774"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<occupation>Scholar <!-- Occupation not in codebook --></occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Matthew Pilkington was an Irish church
minister and art historian. Dinah appears to have been researching Pilkington
and other Art Historians around <date when="1846">1846.</date><lb/> Shearjashub
Spooner, <hi rend="italics">A Biographical History of the Fine Arts</hi> II.— M
to Z, (Philadelphia: George Gebbie, 1873).
https://archive.org/details/abiographicalhi04spoogoog. <lb/> Sorensen, Lee
"Pilkington, Matthew," <hi rend="italics">Dictionary of Art Historians,</hi>
accessed Aug. 2, 2015. https://dictionaryofarthistorians.org/pilkingtonm.htm.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ProcterBryanWaller" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Procter</surname>
<forename>Bryan</forename>
<forename>Waller</forename></persName>
<birth when="1787-11-21"/>
<death when="1874-10-04"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Lawyer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bryan Waller Procter was a
nineteenth-century poet and lawyer. He and his wife <persName ref="#MrsProcter"
>Anne Procter</persName> were well-known in London for their literary
salons.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsProcter" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Procter</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Skepper</surname>
<forename>Anne</forename></persName>
<birth when="1799"/>
<death when="1888"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Anne Skepper Procter was married to the
poet and lawyer <persName ref="#ProcterBryanWaller">Bryan Waller
Procter.</persName>
<date notBefore="1843">From 1843 onwards,</date> she and her husband hosted
lively parties and were well-known names in literary <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName> ODNB.</note>
<!--James Sambrook, "Procter,
Bryan Waller (1787-1874)," ODNB. See PU68 in the Princeton Parrish Collection-->
</person>
<person xml:id="VasariGeorgio" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Vasari</surname>
<forename>Georgio</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1511-07-30"/>
<death when="1574-06-27"/>
<occupation>Scholar</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Georgio Vasari is a famous
sixteenth-century art historian. Dinah appears to have been researching Vasari
and other art historians around <date when="1846">1846.</date><lb/> Shearjashub
Spooner, <hi rend="italics">A Biographical History of the Fine Arts</hi> II.— M
to Z, (Philadelphia: George Gebbie, 1873).
https://archive.org/details/abiographicalhi04spoogoog. <lb/> Sorensen, Lee
"Vasari, Georgio," <hi rend="italics">Dictionary of Art Historians,</hi>
accessed Aug. 2, 2015. https://dictionaryofarthistorians.org/vasarig.htm.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BronteCharlotte" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Nicholls</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Brontë</surname>
<forename>Charlotte</forename>
<addName type="pseudonym">Currer Bell</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1816-04-21"/>
<death when="1855-03-31"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Charlotte Brontë is a celebrated novelist
of the Victorian period, best known for her novel, <title ref="#JaneEyre">Jane
Eyre</title>.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Harriet" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Ruddock</surname>
<forename>Harriet</forename>
<forename>L</forename></persName>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<birth when="1861"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Harriet was the laundry maid at the Corner
House. Source: 1871, 1881 Census of England.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DyasonJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Dyason</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
<forename>Frances</forename></persName>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<birth when="1839"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mrs. Dyason was the housekeeper that took
care of Dinah's home in <placeName ref="#Dover">Dover.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DyasonLouisa" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Dyason</surname>
<forename>Louisa</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1858"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Louisa Dyason was the daughter of <persName
ref="#DyasonJane">Jane,</persName> the housekeeper in charge of Dinah's home
in <placeName ref="#Dover">Dover.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DyasonMaude" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Dyason</surname>
<forename>Maude</forename>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename></persName>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<death when="1872"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Maude Dyason was the daughter of <persName
ref="#DyasonJane">Jane,</persName> the housekeeper in charge of Dinah's home
in <placeName ref="#Dover">Dover.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockMaria" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Mulock</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Horner</surname>
<forename>Maria</forename>
<forename>Sarah</forename></persName>
<death when="1841-02-14"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Maria Mulock was Dinah's paternal
grandmother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename></persName>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<death when="1837-04-16"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Robert Mulock was Dinah's paternal
grandfather.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FulfordWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Fulford</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1812"/>
<death when="1886-06-05"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Major Fulford was the governor of the
Stafford County Jail, where <persName ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas
Mulock</persName> was imprisoned more than once in the 1850s and 1860s.
Fulford was in attendance at <persName ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas
Mulock's</persName> funeral in 1869.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ReadeWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Reade</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>James</forename></persName>
<birth when="1794"/>
<death when="1867"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">William Reade was married to Dinah's
maternal aunt <persName ref="#ReadeMary">Mary Reade</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ReadeElizabeth" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Lee</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Reade</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
<addName>Lizzie</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829-05-23"/>
<death when="1904-10-13"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Elizabeth was Dinah's cousin on the maternal
side. Her parents were <persName ref="#ReadeMary">Mary (Mellard)
Reade</persName> and <persName ref="#ReadeWilliam">William
Reade.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockCharlotte" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Wright</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Mulock</surname>
<forename>Charlotte</forename></persName>
<birth when="1797"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Charlotte was one of Dinah's paternal aunts.
She married <persName ref="#WrightGeorge">George Newenham
Wright.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WrightGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wright</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Newenham</forename></persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<birth when="1794"/>
<death when="1877"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">George Newenham Wright was an Irish writer
and clergyman who was married to Dinah's paternal aunt <persName
ref="#MulockCharlotte">Charlotte.</persName>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HillOctavia" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Hill</surname>
<forename>Octavia</forename></persName>
<birth when="1838"/>
<death when="1912"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Octavia Hill was a housing and social
reformer. She was <persName ref="#CockerellOlive">Olive Cockerell's</persName>
godmother. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyGertrude" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Jolly</surname>
<forename>Gertrude</forename>
<forename>Fanny</forename></persName>
<birth when="1867"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Gertrude was the young daughter of Dinah's
friend <persName ref="#JollyEllen">Ellen Jolly.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyArnold" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Jolly</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Arnold</forename></persName>
<birth when="1869"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Arnold was the young son of Dinah's friend
<persName ref="#JollyEllen">Ellen Jolly</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyPaul" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Jolly</surname>
<forename>Paul</forename></persName>
<birth when="1854"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Paul Jolly was a son of Dinah's friend
<persName ref="#JollyEllen">Ellen Jolly.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JollyElenor" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Jolly</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Voss</surname>
<forename>Elenor</forename>
<forename>Jane</forename></persName>
<birth when="1858"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Elenor was the daughter-in-law of Dinah's
friend <persName ref="#JollyEllen">JollyEllen.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JamiesonJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Jamieson</surname>
<forename>John</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">A physician on <placeName ref="#Arran"
>Arran</placeName>. Dr. John A. Jamieson was appointed Medical Officer of
Health for Arran in 1852. source: Campbell, Thorbjörn. Arran: A History. New
York: Birlinn, 2013. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HoblynFrancis" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hoblyn</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
<forename>Parker</forename></persName>
<birth when="1817"/>
<death when="1896-08-10"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Dr. Francis Hoblyn was a general
practitioner and surgeon in Bath who married Dinah's paternal aunt <persName
ref="#MulockAlicia">Alicia</persName> in 1864. Ancestry.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpencerBellJames" sex="1">
<persName><forename>James</forename>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<surname>Spencer-Bell</surname></persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1872"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">James Spencer-Bell, formerly James Bell, was
a British politician and MP for Guildford from 1853 to 1857. He and his wife,
<persName ref="#SpencerBellMaryAnn"/>Mary Ann Spencer, had homes at
Marylebone and Fawe Park, Keswick. The <orgName ref="Spencer-Bell"
>Spencer-Bells</orgName> were friends of the Craiks. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpencerBellMaryAnn" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Spencer-Bell</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Spencer</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mary Ann Spencer-Bell was the wife of
<persName ref="#SpencerBellJames">James Spencer-Bell</persName>. The
<orgName ref="Spencer-Bell">SpencerBell</orgName> were friends of the
Craiks. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpencerBellFrederick" sex="1">
<persName><forename>James</forename>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<addName>Fred</addName>
<surname>Spencer-Bell</surname></persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<birth when="1863"/>
<death when="1886"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Frederick Spencer-Bell was the son of
Dinah's good friends the <orgName ref="#SpencerBell">Spencer-Bells</orgName>.
Fred died in a boating accident in 1886. "The Times", Saturday, 11 September
1886. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Pilkington</surname>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>Lawrence</forename></persName>
<birth when="1865-06-04"/>
<death when="1897-12-11"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">George Lawrence Pilkington was <persName
ref="#PilkingtonAlexander">Alexander</persName>'s younger brother who went
to Africa as a missionary in <date when="1890">1890</date> and is largely
credited with the first translation of the Luganda Bible. Dinah's daughter
<persName ref="#CraikDorothy">Dorothy</persName> often travelled with George
between Ireland and Shortlands. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonWilhelmina" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Wilhelmina</forename>
<forename>Charity</forename>
<addName>Mina</addName>
<surname type="married">Pilkington</surname>
<surname type="maiden">McDonnell</surname></persName>
<birth when="1832"/>
<death when="1902"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mrs. Pilkington was the mother of <persName
ref="#PilkingtonAlexander">Alexander</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonHenry" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Henry</forename>
<forename>Mulock</forename>
<surname> McDonnell</surname></persName>
<birth when="1813"/>
<death when="1899"/>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Henry Pilkington was the father of <persName
ref="#PilkingtonAlexander">Alexander</persName>. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HendersonJemima" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Meo</surname>
<surname type="married">Henderson</surname>
<forename>Jemima</forename></persName>
<birth when="1824"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Jemima was the wife of <persName
ref="#MeoLuigi">Luigi Meo</persName>, a musician acquaintance of
Dinah's.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpeerCharlton" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Speer</surname>
<forename>Charlton</forename>
<forename>Templeman</forename></persName>
<birth when="1859"/>
<death when="1921"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Charlton Speer, an acquaintance of the
Craiks, was a professor of piano at the Royal Academy of Music.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpeerAmy" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Speer</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Hallett</surname>
<forename>Amy</forename>
<forename>Matilda</forename></persName>
<birth when="1865"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Amy Speer, wife of <persName
ref="#SpeerCharlton">Charlton</persName>, was an acquaintance of the
Craiks.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="EastlakeMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Eastlake</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename></persName>
<birth when="1856"/>
<death when="1911"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mary Eastlake was a British actress.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KendalWH" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Kendal</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Hunter</forename></persName>
<birth when="1843"/>
<death when="1917"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">W.H. Kendal was an actor and theatre
manager. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ElliottMartha" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Elliott</surname>
<forename>Martha</forename></persName>
<birth when="1833"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Martha Elliott was a servant of Dinah's
aunts in Bath.</note>
<!-- JP: In the 1861 Census of England she was
listed as being 28 years of age and a House Servant. In the 1871 Census she was listed as 36 years of age, from Bath, and a Domestic Servant.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="YongeCharlotte" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Yonge</surname>
<forename>Charlotte</forename>
<forename>Mary</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio">Charlotte Mary Yonge was a novelist and the author of the Heir of
Redclyffe. George Craik was her publisher at Macmillan's.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LangrisheAmitia" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Langrishe</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Brown</surname>
<forename>Amitia</forename>
<forename>Snead</forename></persName>
<birth when="1853"/>
<death when="1941"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mrs. Langrishe lived with her husband
Richard, an architect, at Shamrock Lodge, Althone.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KeeneJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Keene</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Wood</forename></persName>
<birth when="1842"/>
<death when="1919"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">John Keene was the <orgName ref="#Craik"
>Craiks</orgName> coachman and gardener at <placeName ref="#CornerHouse"
>Corner House</placeName> In the 1881 Census of England he is listed as
living at the Stables at <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner
House</placeName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KeeneEllen" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Keene</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Meadon</surname>
<forename>Ellen</forename></persName>
<birth when="1846"/>
<death when="1916"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Ellen Keene was the wife of the <orgName
ref="#Craik">Craiks</orgName> coachman and gardener at <placeName
ref="#CornerHouse">Corner House</placeName>, <persName ref="#KeeneJohn">John
Keene</persName>. In the 1881 Census of England, Ellen is listed as a
visitor, with two of her children, at <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName>
home in <placeName ref="#Dover">Dover</placeName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LangdaleArthur" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Artuhur</forename>
<surname>Langdale</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Arthur Langdale was the husband of <persName
ref="#LangdaleAnnie">Annie Langdale.</persName> The Langdales were friends
of the <orgName ref="Craik">Craiks.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LangdaleAnnie" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Annie</forename>
<surname>Langdale</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Annie Langdale was the wife of <persName
ref="#LangdaleArthur">Arthur Langdale.</persName> The Langdales were friends
of the <orgName ref="Craik">Craiks.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LadyCaroline" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Georgina</forename>
<forename>Caroline</forename>
<surname>Legge</surname></persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<birth when="1795-05-14"/>
<death when="1885-08-11"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Lady Caroline was the daughter of George
Legge, the 3rd Earl of Dartmouth.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PhillipsRobertEdward" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Phillips</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename>
<forename>Edward</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1848"/>
<death when="1888-02-20"/>
<nationality>British</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Dr. Phillips was a homeopathic physician in
Bromley, originally trained as an orthodox physician, who treated Dinah in the
final months of her life. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GattyMargaret" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Gatty</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Scott</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename></persName>
<birth when="1809-06-03"/>
<death when="1873-10-04"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Gatty was an English writer of
children's literature and natural history.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BellGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bell</surname>
<forename>George</forename></persName>
<birth when="1812-10-12"/>
<death when="1890-11-27"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Bell was an English publisher and
bookseller. <date from="1867" to="1890">From the late 1860s until his death in
1890</date>, he was known as an authority on English copyright.<lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LowellJamesRussell" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lowell</surname>
<forename>James</forename>
<forename>Russell</forename></persName>
<birth when="1819-02-22"/>
<death when="1891-08-12"/>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Politician</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">James Russell Lowell was a New England
poet, critic, and diplomat. Lowell was well-known both in English and American
literary circles, and in the latter part of his life, he travelled frequently
between the two nations.<lb/> ANB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RuskinJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Ruskin</surname>
<forename>John</forename></persName>
<birth when="1819-02-08"/>
<death when="1900-01-20"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">John Ruskin was an influential art and
social critic. He is famous for his articulation of gendered "separate spheres"
in Victorian society — a model which insists on "male leadership and female
care."<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WildeOscar" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wilde</surname>
<forename>Oscar</forename></persName>
<birth when="1854-10-16"/>
<death when="1900-11-30"/>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Oscar Wilde was a famous writer of the
late Victorian period. He was a central figure in the decadent/aesthetic
movement in Victorian literature and is well-known today for works such as <hi
rend="italics">The Picture of Dorian Gray</hi> (1890) and <hi rend="italics"
>The Importance of Being Earnest</hi> (1895).<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Metcalf" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Metcalf</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr. Metcalf was a shipowner and an
aquaintance of Thomas Mulock Jr.'s. Metcalf was the M.P. for
<placeName>Tynemouth</placeName>, near <placeName>North Shields</placeName>
where the Kate docked before sailing to <placeName>Cromarty</placeName>. -->
<lb/> Aleyn Lyell Reade, "Dinah Mulock and her Father," Notes and Queries (Feb.
2, 1924): 79</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="TaylorThomas" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Taylor</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<addName>Captain</addName></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Captain Thomas Taylor commanded the Kate
– an A1 vessel which sailed from <placeName ref="#Newcastle"
>Newcastle</placeName> to <placeName ref="#Cromarty">Cromarty</placeName>
and then to <placeName ref="#Quebec">Quebec</placeName> in <date when="1846"
>1846</date>. Dinah's younger brother <persName>Thomas Jr.</persName> was
articled on the Kate.<lb/> Lucille H. Campey, Fast Sailing and Copper-Bottomed:
Aberdeen Sailing Ships and the Emigrant Scots They Carried to Canada, 1774-1855
(Toronto: Natural Heritage/Natural History Inc., 2002), 78.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LittleMary" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Mary</forename>
<addName>Little Mary</addName></persName>
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Little Mary was one of Dinah's favoured
housemaids at Wildwood.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SpringfieldGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Springfield</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Springfield was a friend of Dinah
and <persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben Mulock</persName>'s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWhite" sex="1">
<persName><surname>White</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mr White was an acquaintance of Dinah's
who lived in <placeName ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow.</placeName> His daughter,
<persName ref="#MissWhite">Miss White</persName>, seems to have been
romantically involved with another of Dinah's friends named <persName
ref="#MrSpringfield">Mr. Springfield.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHerford" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Herford</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Herford was likely the mother of
Dinah's close friend, <persName ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura
Herford.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HerfordIvan" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Herford</surname>
<forename>Ivan</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Ivan was a relative of Dinah's close
friend, <persName ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsBlackett" sex="1">
<persName><surname type="married">Blackett</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Blackett was married to <persName
ref="#BlackettHenry">Henry Blackett</persName> of the publishing house,
<orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsZiepel" sex="1">
<persName><surname type="married">Ziepel</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs Ziepel was the matriarch of <orgName
ref="#Ziepel">the Ziepel family.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SmedleyFrank" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Smedley</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<addName>Frank</addName></persName>
<birth when="1818-10-04"/>
<death when="1864-05-01"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frank E. Smedley was a friend of Dinah's.
He was a novelist and was also editor for <title corresp="#SharpesLondonMag"
>Sharpe's London Magazine.</title><lb/> ODNB. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsSmedley" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Smedley</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Smedley was married to <persName
ref="#SmedleyFrank">Frank Smedley.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HughesThomas" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hughes</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename></persName>
<birth when="1822-10-20"/>
<death when="1896-03-22"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Thomas Hughes was a writer of children's
novels. He was well-known for authoring the bestselling children's novel,
<title>Tom Brown's School Days</title> (<date when="1857">1857</date>).<lb/>
ODNB. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HughesFrances" sex="1">
<persName><surname type="married"
>Hughes</surname><forename>Anne</forename><forename>Frances</forename></persName>
<birth when="1826" cert="low"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frances Hughes was the wife of the
English writer, <persName ref="#HughesThomas">Thomas Hughes.</persName> They
married in <date when="1847">1847.</date><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsSmith" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Smith</surname>
</persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Smith</persName> was <persName
ref="#Orrinsmith">Harvey Orrin Smith</persName>'s mother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrRichards" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Richards</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsRichards" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Richards</surname>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs Richards was married to <persName
ref="#MrRichards">Mr Richards</persName></note></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="JackWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Jack</surname><forename>William</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsJack" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Jack</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs Jack was married to <persName
ref="#JackWilliam">William Jack</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MayallJoe" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mayall</surname><forename>Joseph</forename><forename>Parkin</forename><addName>Joe</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1839"/>
<death when="1906"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Joe Mayall was the second son of the
renowned photographer, <persName ref="#MayallJohn">John Mayall.</persName>
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben Mulock</persName> worked for <persName
ref="#MayallJohn">John</persName> and <persName ref="#MayallJoe">Joe
Mayall</persName> at their studio in <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>, for about a year <date notBefore="1858" notAfter="1859"
>from 1858 to 1859.</date></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MayallJohn">
<persName><surname>Mayall</surname><forename>John</forename><forename>Jabez</forename><forename>Edwin</forename><addName>Jabez
Meal</addName></persName>
<birth when="1813-09-17"/>
<death when="1901-03-06"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">John Mayall was a successful professional
photographer specializing in portraiture and narrative photography. He became a
prominent name in England following his work at the Great Exhibition in <date
when="1851">1851</date>, and was commissioned to photograph the royal family
on several occasions.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="IsbisterWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Isbister</surname>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1838"/>
<death when="1916"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">William Isbister was part of the
publishing <orgName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DaldyIsbisterCo">Daldy, Isbister
and Co.</orgName> He founded the publishing company <orgName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#StrahanCo"> with <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#StrahanAlexander">Alexander
Strahan</persName>.</orgName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BensonJane" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Benson</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename></persName>
<birth when="1825"/>
<death when="1897-06-16"/>
<occupation>Teacher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Jane Benson was a lifelong friend and
colleague of Dinah's good friend <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MartinFrances">Frances Martin</persName>. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="VignolesCharles">
<persName><surname>Vignoles</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>Blacker</forename></persName>
<birth when="1793-05-31"/>
<death when="1875-11-17"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<occupation>Civil Engineer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Charles Blacker Vignoles was an influential
railway engineer who <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MulockBenjamin"
>Ben</persName> worked with on the Bahia and San Francisco Railway in
Brazil. ODNB</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WaughBenjamin">
<persName><surname>Waugh</surname>
<forename>Benjamin</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1839-02-20"/>
<death when="1908-03-11"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Benjamin Waugh was a social reformer devoted
to protecting the rights of children. He was editor of <title
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#SundayMagazine">The Sunday Magazine</title>, a
religious periodical in which Dinah published articles, from 1874 to 1896.
ODNB</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FieldsAnnie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Fields</surname>
<forename>Annie</forename>
<forename>Adams</forename></persName>
<birth when="1834-06-06"/>
<death when="1915-01-05"/>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Annie Adams Fields was an American writer
married to <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#FieldsJames">James
Fields</persName>. Gollin, Rita K. Annie Adams Fields: Woman of Letters.
University of Massachusetts Press, 2002.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FieldsJames" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Fields</surname>
<forename>James</forename>
<forename>Adams</forename></persName>
<birth when="1817-12-31"/>
<death when="1881-04-24"/>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">James Thomas Fields was an American writer
and publisher with <orgName corresp="#TicknorFields">Ticknor &
Fields</orgName>. He was married to <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#FieldsAnnie">Annie Fields</persName>. American
National Biography Online. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RitchieLeitch" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Ritchie</surname>
<forename>Duncan</forename>
<forename>Leith</forename></persName>
<birth when="1797-06-12"/>
<death when="1865-01-14"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>writer</occupation>
<occupation>journalist</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Leitch Ritchie was a Scottish novelist and
journalist. ODNB. Ancestry. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Ouida" sex="2">
<persName><surname>de la Ramée</surname>
<forename>Maria</forename>
<forename>Louise</forename>
<addName>Ouida</addName></persName>
<birth when="1839-01-01"/>
<death when="1908-01-25"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>French</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">Ouida was a popular late-Victorian
novelist whose work often featured adultery and continental settings. She is
best known for her novel <title corresp="#UnderTwoFlags">Under Two
Flags</title>. Dinah compared the moral tone of her work unfavourably to her
own.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="StrahanAlexander" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Strahan</surname>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1833"/>
<death when="1918"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Alexander Strahan</persName>
founded <orgName ref="#GoodWords">Good Words</orgName>, a journal which
<persName>Dinah</persName> often published in.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacleodDonald" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Macleod</surname>
<forename>Donald</forename>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName>
<roleName>Doctor</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1831-03-18"/>
<death when="1916-02-11"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Minister of the Church of Scotland</occupation>
<occupation>Magazine Editor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Rev. Dr. Donald Macleod took over as editor
of <title ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GoodWords">Good Words</title> after the death
of his older brother <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MacleodNorman">Norman
Macleod</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacleodNorman" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Macleod</surname>
<forename>Norman</forename>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName>
<roleName>Doctor</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1812-06-03"/>
<death when="1872-06-16"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Minister of the Church of Scotland</occupation>
<occupation>Magazine Editor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Rev. Dr. Norman Macleod was editor of <title
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GoodWords">Good Words</title> from its inception in
1860 until his death in 1872, when his brother <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MacleodDonald">Donald Macleod</persName> became
editor of the magazine. ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CorbettThomas" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Corbett</surname>
<forename>Thomas</forename></persName>
<birth when="1822-03-23"/>
<death when="1880-04-01"/>
<occupation>Merchant</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Thomas Corbett was a <placeName
ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow</placeName>merchant also known as a philanthropist
who founded many Cooking Depots.</note>
<!-- Mentioned in letter PU209. Kelsey Jacobi-->
</person>
<person xml:id="CorbettArchibald" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Corbett</surname>
<forename>Archibald</forename>
<forename>Cameron</forename>
<roleName>First Baron Rowallan</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1856-05-23"/>
<death when="1933-03-19"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Archibald Corbett was the son of <persName
ref="#CorbettThomas">Thomas Corbett</persName>. He also knew <persName
ref="AndersonAlexander">Alexander Anderson</persName> and they travelled in
Europe together. Archibald became a politician later in life. </note>
<!-- Mentioned in letter PU209.Kelsey Jacobi -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SandozJules" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Sandoz</surname>
<forename>Jules</forename>
<forename>M.</forename></persName>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<!-- Mentioned in letter PU208.Kelsey Jacobi-->
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonAlexander" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Anderson</surname>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
<addName>Surfaceman</addName></persName>
<birth when="1845-05-30"/>
<death when="1909-07-11"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey"> Alexander Anderson was a poet who wrote
under the pseudonym Surfaceman. When he was younger, in 1862, he became a
platelayer for the Glasgow and South-Western Railway Company when Dinah
recommended him to <persName ref="#IsbisterWilliam">William Isbister</persName>
as she felt he was talented and should move to literary work. </note>
<!-- Dinah mentions him in letter PU209. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MeadeElizabeth" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Toulmin Smith</surname>
<surname>Meade</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
<forename>Thomasina</forename>
<addName>L.T. Meade</addName></persName>
<birth when="1844-06-05"/>
<death when="1914-10-26"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Elizabeth Meade was a children's writer and
novelist who wrote as L.T. Meade, and is best known as a writer for older
girls. Some of her work also appeared in <title corresp="SundayMagazine">Sunday
Magazine</title>, a publication Dinah also wrote for.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MassonDavid" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Masson</surname><forename>David</forename></persName>
<birth when="1822-12-07"/>
<death when="1907-10-06"/>
<nationality>Scotland</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>David Masson</persName> was a
biographer as well as an editor with the publishing firm <orgName
ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co.</orgName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> corresponded with him while working as a
copy-editor for <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan.</orgName><lb/> ODNB.<lb/>
Jack M. Downs, "David Masson, Belles Lettres, and a Victorian Theory of the
Novel," Victorian Literature and Culture 43 (2015): 1-21,
doi:10.1017/S106015031400031X.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlakeWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Blake</surname>
<forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1757-11-28"/>
<death when="1827-08-12"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>William Blake</persName> was an
engraver and poet of the Romantic era. His work gained popularity with
Victorian audiences following the publication of <persName
ref="#GilchristAlexander">Alexander Gilchrist</persName>'s <title
corresp="#LifeofWilliamBlake">Life of William Blake</title> in <date
when="1863">1863.</date><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GilchristAlexander">
<persName><surname>Gilchrist</surname><forename>Alexander</forename></persName>
<birth when="1828-04-28"/>
<death when="1861-11-30"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Alexander Gilchrist</persName>
was a Victorian biographer best known for writing the first biography of
<persName ref="#BlakeWilliam">William Blake.</persName>
<title corresp="#LifeofWilliamBlake">The Life of William Blake</title> was
published in 1863 after Gilchrist's death.<lb/> ODNB.<lb/>
<!--See https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=6HdAAAAAYAAJ&rdid=book-6HdAAAAAYAAJ&rdot=1 -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrChermside" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chermside</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename>
<forename>Seymour</forename>
<forename>Conway</forename>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1823"/>
<death when="1867-07-30"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Reverend Richard S.C.
Chermside</persName> was a novelist whose works Dinah reviewed for
publication by <orgName ref="#MacmillanCo">Macmillan</orgName>
<date when="1860" precision="high">c.
1860.</date><!--KF: See Ancestry.com --></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsChermside" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Chermside</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Dawson</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename></persName>
<birth when="1831"/>
<death when="1897-11-20"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs Emily Chermside</persName>
was married to the novelist <persName ref="#MrChermside">Richard S.C.
Chermside</persName><!--KF: See Ancestry.com --></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CupplesGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Cupples</surname><forename>George</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<birth when="1822"/>
<death when="1891"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>George Cupples</persName> was a Scottish
writer who specialized in nautical novels. <persName>Dinah</persName> reviewed
his novel <title ref="#HerbertsPrize">Herbert's Prize</title> for publication
by <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan.</orgName><lb/> "George Cupples Author
Information," <title>The Circulating Library: a Database of Victorian Fiction,
1837-1901,</title> Web. <!--http://www.victorianresearch.org/atcl/show_author.php?aid=55-->
<lb/> "The Author of 'the Green Hand'," <title>Book News: an Illustrated
Magazine of Literature and Books</title> volume 9 (1890-1891): 452-453, Web.
<!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=M2xPAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA452&lpg=PA452&dq=George+Cupples+novelist&source=bl&ots=kMFto1mqH9&sig=S1mRpqJYAVx6Bwzg4oepEByKfvc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj8__2i_ZfSAhVC7WMKHcWIBl4Q6AEIPzAH#v=onepage&q=George%20Cupples%20novelist&f=false--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CunninghamAllan" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Cunningham</surname><forename>Allan</forename><addName>Hidallan</addName></persName>
<birth when="1784-12-07"/>
<death when="1842-10-29"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio"><persName>Allan Cunningham</persName> was a Romantic poet and
songwriter. <persName>Dinah</persName> advised <persName
ref="#GilchristAlexander">Alexander Gilchrist</persName> to cut a section
about <persName>Cunningham</persName> and his publishing relationships from the
<title corresp="#LifeofWilliamBlake">biography of William
Blake.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BaynePeter" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bayne</surname><forename>Peter</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830-10-18"/>
<death when="1883-10-17"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Peter Bayne</persName> was a
Scottish journalist who, <date from="1860" to="1862">from 1860 to 1862</date>,
also worked as the editor of <title corresp="#Dial">The Dial.</title>
<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CromekRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Cromek</surname><forename>Robert</forename><forename>Hartley</forename></persName>
<birth when="1770"/>
<death when="1812"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey" type="bio"><persName>Robert Cromeck</persName> was
an engraver, editor, and art dealer who worked closely with <persName
ref="#BlakeWilliam">William Blake.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrodieHelen" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Brodie</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Chisholm</surname><forename>Helen</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1817-06-11"/>
<death when="1888-08-08"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Helen Brodie</persName> was a friend of
<persName>Dinah Craik</persName>'s. She was an amateur painter married to
the sculptor <persName ref="#BrodieWilliam">William Brodie.</persName> The
Brodies and their children lived in <placeName>Aberdeen,</placeName>
<placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName><lb/> "Brodie, William
(1815–1881), ODNB.<lb/> Ancestry.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrodieWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Brodie</surname><forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1815-01-22"/>
<death when="1881-10-30"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mr. Brodie</persName> was married to
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend, <persName ref="#BrodieHelen"
>Helen.</persName> He was a talented sculptor and a member of the
<orgName>Royal Scottish Academy.</orgName>
<persName>Dinah</persName>'s husband <persName ref="#CraikGeorge"
>George</persName> seems to have admired <persName>William</persName> and
his works, as he included <persName>Brodie</persName>'s name and image in a
scrapbook of notable British artists and writers from the 1860s.<lb/>
ODNB.<lb/> "Scrapbook," TypPh 805.63.3035, Houghton Library, Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChisholmWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Chisholm</surname></persName>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>William Chisholm</persName> was the father
of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend, <persName ref="#BrodieHelen"
>Helen Brodie.</persName><lb/> Ancestry. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OliphantMaggie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Oliphant</surname>
<forename>Margaret</forename>
<forename>Wilson</forename>
<addName>Maggie</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1853-05-21"/>
<death when="1864-01-27"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Maggie Oliphant</persName> was <persName
ref="#OliphantMargaret">Margaret Oliphant</persName>'s first child.<lb/>
Margaret Oliphant, "Margaret Oliphant: A Brief Chronology," Autobiography of
Margaret Oliphant, ed. Elisabeth Jay (Broadview P, 2002), 25-26.</note>
</person>
<!-- Here, the list of personal relationships start, right now focusing on family relations -->
<listRelation type="personal">
<!--Marriages-->
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#JollyEllen #JollyPaul"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#HallSamuelCarter #HallAnnaMaria"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#DMC #CraikGeorge"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#CraikDorothy #PilkingtonAlexander"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#AllinghamHelen #AllinghamWilliam"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#BarnesFrederick #BrahamLeonora"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#HolmanHunt #WaughFanny"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#HolmanHunt #WaughEdith"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#LaneMary #LaneEdward"/>
<relation name="spouse" mutual="#PatonMaggie #PatonJosep"/>
<!-- Aunts and Uncles -->
<relation name="aunt" active="#ReadeMary" passive="#DMC"/>
<relation name="aunt" active="#HerfordLaura" passive="#AllinghamHelen"/>
<relation name="aunt" active="#WaughFanny" passive="#HuntGladysHolman"/>
<!--Siblings-->
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#DMC #MulockTom #MulockBen"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#WaughEdith #WaughFanny"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#CockerellOlive #CockerellSydney"/>
<relation name="sibling"
mutual="#DobellSydney #DobellClarence #DobellNora #JollyEllen"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#DrysdaleGeorge #DrysdaleCharles #LaneMary"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#MacmillanDaniel #MacmillanAlexander"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#CraikGeorge #CraikHenry"/>
<relation name="sibling" mutual="#LaneMary #DrysdaleGeorge #DrysdaleCharles"/>
<!-- Parents and Children -->
<relation type="personal" name="child" active="#DMC #MulockBen #MulockTom"
passive="#MulockThomas #MulockDinah"/>
<relation name="child" active="#DrysdaleGeorge #DrysdaleCharles"
passive="#DrysdaleLady"/>
<relation name="child" active="#HuntGladysHolman"
passive="#HolmanHunt #WaughEdith"/>
<relation name="child" active="#CraikGeorgiana" passive="#CraikGeorgeLillieSr"/>
<relation name="child" active="#MarstonPhilipBourke"
passive="#MarstonWestland #MarstonEleanor"/>
<relation name="child" active="#CraikHenry #CraikGeorge"
passive="#JamesCraik #CraikMargaret"/>
<relation name="child" active="#DeWittHenriette" passive="#GuizotFrancois"/>
<relation name="child" active="#DrysdaleCharles #DrysdaleGeorge #LaneMary"
passive="#DrysdaleLady"/>
</listRelation>
<!-- Here, the list of social or professional relationships start, focusing on publishers and illustrators-->
<listRelation type="social">
<relation name="publisher" active="#HenryBlackett" passive="#DMC"/>
<relation name="publisher" active="#AlexanderMacmillan" passive="#DMC #HenryCraik"/>
<relation name="publisher" active="#FredericChapman" passive="#DMC"/>
</listRelation>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="FictionalCharacters">
<head>Fictional Characters</head>
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="OgilvieEleanor" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Ogilvie</surname>
<forename>Eleanor</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">The orphaned Eleanor Ogilvie is a primary
character in Dinah's <date when="1849">1849</date> novel <title
corresp="#Ogilvies">The Ogilvies.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="OgilvieKatharine" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Ogilvie</surname>
<forename>Katharine</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Katharine Ogilvie is a primary character
in Dinah's <date when="1849">1849</date> novel <title corresp="#Ogilvies">The
Ogilvies.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WychnorPhilip" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wychnor</surname>
<forename>Philip</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Philip Wychnor is a primary character in
Dinah's <date when="1849">1849</date> novel <title corresp="#Ogilvies">The
Ogilvies.</title> He is the love interest of <persName ref="#OgilvieEleanor"
>Eleanor Ogilvie.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PennythorneLeigh" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Pennythorne</surname>
<forename>Leigh</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Leigh Pennythorne is a secondary
character in Dinah's <date when="1849">1849</date> novel, <title
corresp="#Ogilvies">The Ogilvies.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KingLear" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">King Lear is the titular character in a
Shakespearean play.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LocksleyNed" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Ned Locksley</persName> is a
fictional character in <persName ref="#MrChermside">Mr. Chermside's</persName>
novel, <title corresp="NedLocksley">Ned Locksley.</title>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Herbert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mansfield</surname><forename>Herbert</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Herbert Mansfield</persName> is
a fictional character from <title corresp="#MoorCottage">The Moor
Cottage</title> by <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MissBlyth">Miss
Blyth.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Mabel" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Eversley</surname><forename>Mabel</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mabel</persName> is a fictional
character from <title corresp="#MoorCottage">The Moor Cottage</title> by
<persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MissBlyth">Miss Blyth.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Millicent" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Millicent</forename></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Millicent</persName> is a
fictional character from <title corresp="#MoorCottage">The Moor Cottage</title>
by <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MissBlyth">Miss Blyth.</persName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Jackson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Jackson</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Captain Jackson</persName> is a
fictional character from <title corresp="#MoorCottage">The Moor Cottage</title>
by <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MissBlyth">Miss Blyth.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LadyS" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Lady S.</persName> is a
fictional character in <title corresp="#NedLocksley">Ned Locksley</title> by
<persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MrChermside">Mr.
Chermside.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarrySarah" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Barry</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Herron</surname>
<forename>Sarah</forename>
<forename>Douglas</forename></persName>
<birth when="1832-04-10"/>
<death when="1926-09-01"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mrs. Barry was the wife of <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#BarryTress">Sir Francis Tress Barry</persName>, a
wealthy merchant. The Barrys were friends of the Craiks, and lived in Beckenham
at the Clock House in 1872 before moving to a mansion in Clewer sometime before
1876. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarryTress" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Barry</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
<forename>Tress</forename>
<roleName>Sir</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1825-06-08"/>
<death when="1907-02-28"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>merchant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Sir Francis Tress Barry was a wealthy
English merchant who, along with his wife <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#BarrySarah">Sarah</persName>, were friends with the
Craiks. The Barrys lived in Beckenham at the Clock House in 1872 before moving
to a mansion in Clewer sometime before 1876. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="NewlandsJames" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Newlands</surname>
<forename>James</forename></persName>
<birth when="1813"/>
<death when="1871"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">James Newlands was a Scottish engineer and
architect who <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MulockBen">Ben</persName>
worked with in <placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Liverpool"/>Liverpool.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GayleardChristopher" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Gayleard</surname>
<forename>Christopher</forename></persName>
<birth when="1836"/>
<death when="1896"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Jamaica</nationality>
<occupation>physician</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Christopher Gayleard was a physician from
Jamaica who was educated in England and was surgeon for the Bahia railway. He
and <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MulockBen">Ben</persName> became friend
when Ben worked on the Bahia Railway. Dr. Gayleard was with Ben in Swansea
during the last few months of Ben's life, and visited Dinah in the 1880s.
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MottAlbert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mott</surname>
<forename>Albert</forename>
<forename>Julius</forename>
<addName>A. J. Barrowcliffe</addName></persName>
<birth when="1822"/>
<death when="1899-06-13"/>
<occupation>Wine Merchant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="ParkerJanice">Albert was a friend of Dinah's. He married
<persName ref="#MottClara">Clara Dobell</persName>, sister of <persName
ref="#DobellClarence">Clarence Dobell</persName>, a close friend of Dinah's.
Albert wrote non-fiction pieces under his own name, and used the pseudonym A.
J. Barrowcliffe to publish three novels. Sutherland, John. The Longman
Companion to Victorian fiction. Routledge, 2014.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MottGrey" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mott</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>Grey</forename></persName>
<birth when="1832-05-27"/>
<death when="1905-11-07"/>
<occupation>engineer</occupation>
<occupation/>
<note type="bio" resp="ParkerJanice">Grey Mott was the younger brother of Dinah's
friend <persName ref="#MottAlbert">Albert Mott</persName>, sister of <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DobellClarence">Clarence Dobell</persName>, a close
friend of Dinah's. Albert wrote non-fiction pieces under his own name, and used
the pseudonym A. J. Barrowcliffe to publish three novels. Sutherland, John. The
Longman Companion to Victorian fiction. Routledge, 2014.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CaptainAtkinson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Atkinson</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename>
<forename>Frederick</forename></persName>
<birth when="1850-01-06"/>
<death when="1887-07-31"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Captain Atkinson died in battle in
<placeName ref="#Burma">Burma</placeName>. <!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WesternMrs" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Western</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Atkinson</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename></persName>
<birth when="1843-12-04"/>
<death when="1928-03-21"/>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
</person>
<person xml:id="WesternIsabel" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Western</surname>
<forename>Isabel</forename>
<forename>Caroline</forename></persName>
<birth when="1867-09-19"/>
<death when="1949-10-06"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="TuemanAllen" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Thomson</surname>
<forename>Allen</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1809-04-02"/>
<death when="1884-03-21"/>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<occupation>Physician</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="ParkerJanice"><persName>Allen Thomson</persName> was a
well-known Scottish anatomist, embryologist, and professor. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarnesHenry" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Barnes </surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
<forename>Burr</forename></persName>
<birth when="1845-12-14"/>
<death when="1911-01-12"/>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Henry Burr Barnes was editor of the
Interantional Review from 1874 to 1879, and a partner in his father's A. S.
Barnes publishing firm.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Daldy" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Daldy</surname>
<forename>Frederic</forename>
<forename>Richard</forename>
<addName>Frederick</addName></persName>
<birth when="1825"/>
<death when="1905-02-05"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">F. R. Daldy was a publisher who was part of
<orgName ref="#DaldyIsbisterCo"> Daldy, Isbister and Co.</orgName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MacmillanFrederick" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Macmillan</surname><forename>Frederick</forename></persName>
<birth when="1850-10-05"/>
<death when="1936"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Frederick Macmillan</persName>
was a son of <persName ref="#MacmillanDaniel">Daniel</persName> and <persName
ref="#MacmillanFrances">Frances Macmillan</persName>. He worked at the
<orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</orgName>'s Cambridge branch with his
cousin <persName ref="#BowesRobert">Robert Bowes</persName> before moving to
the <placeName ref="#NewYork">New York</placeName> branch in <date when="1871"
>1871.</date> In <date when="1876">1876</date> he returned to <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> to become a partner in the firm.<lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BowesRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bowes</surname><forename>Robert</forename></persName>
<birth when="1835-08-22"/>
<death when="1919-02-09"/>
<nationality>British</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<note resp="CraikSiteIndex.xml#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Robert Bowes</persName>
was a nephew of <persName ref="#MacmillanDaniel">Daniel</persName> and
<persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander Macmillan's.</persName> He
worked for <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</orgName>'s <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> branch at <placeName ref="#HenriettaStreet"
>Henrietta Street</placeName>
<orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co.</orgName> from <date when="1846"
>1846</date> until <date when="1863">1863</date> and then moved to manage
the <placeName ref="#Cambridge">Cambridge</placeName> location. <lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RosettiChristina" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Rossetti</surname>
<forename>Christina</forename>
<forename>Georgina</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830-12-05"/>
<death when="1894-12-29"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="JacobiKelsey">Christina Rossetti was a poet who published
in <title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's Magazine</title>. She is
well-known for her poem <title corresp="#GoblinMarket">Goblin Market</title>
published in <date when="1862">1862</date>. She was the sister of <persName
ref="#RosettiDanteGabriel">Dante Gabriel Rossetti</persName> and had
connections with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KingsleyHenry" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Kingsley</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830-01-02"/>
<death when="1876-05-24"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="JacobiKelsey">Henry Kingsley was a novelist and essayist,
who tried to seek a fortune in the Australian goldfields, but returned to
England after little financial success and turned to writing.<persName
ref="#KingsleyCharles">Charles Kingsley</persName> was his brother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="VidalMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Vidal</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Theresa</forename></persName>
<birth when="1815-07-25"/>
<death when="1873-11-19"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Mary Vidal was a novelist who was especially
known for her Australian fiction, as she lived for some time in Australia. One
of her more well-known works was <title corresp="#Bengala">Bengala, or, Some
Time Ago</title>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SmithAlexander" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Smith</surname>
<forename>Alexander</forename></persName>
<birth when="1829-12-31"/>
<death when="1867-01-05"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Socttish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Alexander Smith was a poet and essayist who
wrote for publications such as <title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's
Magazine</title> and <title ref="#GoodWords">Good Words.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GilbertElizabeth" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Gilbert</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
<forename>Margaretta</forename>
<forename>Maria</forename></persName>
<birth when="1826-08-07"/>
<death when="1885-02-07"/>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#JacobiKelsey">Elizabeth Gilbert was a campaigner for blind
people, as she herself was blinded at a young age due to a severe case of
scarlet fever. She supported many organziations that helped the blind, and also
founded what became the <orgName ref="#BlindAssociation">Association for
Promoting the General Welfare of the Blind.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Baleson" sex="2">
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">"Mrs. Baleson of John's" is mentioned as an
acquaintance of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> who lives in <placeName
ref="#Cambridge">Cambridge.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsDickinson" sex="2">
<note resp="AndersonHannah">Mrs. Dickinson seems to have been a fan of <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah's.</persName> She had a missing son.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Hungerford" sex="1">
<note resp="AndersonHannah">Hungerford is a possibly fictional Captain written
about by another writer whose initials were <persName>DMM</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GarnettRichard" sex="1">
<birth when="1835-02-27"/>
<death when="1906-04-13"/>
<note resp="AndersonHannah">Richard Garnett was a British librarian and author. He
helped <persName ref="DMC">Dinah</persName> with her work on fairy
tales.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JebbHG">
<note resp="AndersonHannah">H.G. Jebb was the author of <title
ref="OutoftheDepths">Out of the Depths.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="EdwynMartin" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GivogueStevensonLecia">Edwyn Martin was
a daily tutor. He was quite ill, and asked <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DMC">Dinah</persName> for a loan in <date
when="1859">1859</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MudieCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Mudie</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>Edward</forename></persName>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1890"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Businessman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="GivogueStevensonLecia">Charles Edward Mudie was the founder
of a circulating library, which by the mid-century had over 25,000 subscribers.
It became one of the major distributors of fiction in Britain.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PerraultCharles" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Perrault</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1628-01-12"/>
<death when="1703-05-16"/>
<occupation>Lawyer</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>French</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="GivogueStevensonLecia">Charles Perrault worked as a
secretary at <orgName ref="#InscriptionsBellesLettres">Academy of Inscriptions
and Belles-Lettres</orgName> and held many other positions. Perrault is best
known for his writing in the fairy tale genre; his works include <title>"Le
Petit Chaperon Rouge" (Little Red Riding Hood")</title>, <title>"La Belle au
bois dormant"</title> (Sleeping Beauty), and <title>"Cendrillon"</title>
(Cinderella).</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="WilsonJanet" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Wilson</surname>
<forename>Janet</forename>
<forename>Macmillan</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Janet Wilson</persName> was
sister to <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Daniel</persName> and <persName
ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander Macmillan.</persName> She was a
housekeeper for <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander</persName> in
<date when="1833">1833</date> and for <persName ref="#MacmillanDaniel"
>Daniel</persName> in <date when="1840">1840</date>, but had to return to
<placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland</placeName> both times for financial
reasons. <date notBefore="1850-07">By July 1850</date>,
<persName>Janet</persName> was married to a <persName>Mr. Wilson</persName>
and lived in <placeName>Stewarton,</placeName>
<placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName><lb/> Charles L. Graves, Life
and Letters of Alexander Macmillan (Macmillan and Co), 44-60. <!--https://archive.org/stream/lifelettersofale00gravuoft/lifelettersofale00gravuoft_djvu.txt-->
<!--KF: In letters from c. 1859, Dinah often refers to Alexander's sister. At first, it seemed like she meant Daniel's wife, but later she actually refers to Frances as his sister-in-law. I wonder if Janet might have come over from Scotland to help manage the "blended family" after Daniel's death in 1857. Unconfirmed. -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BackhouseDinah" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Backhouse</surname>
<forename>Dinah</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1832"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Dinah Backhouse</persName> was a
friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s who lived in the <placeName
ref="#LakesDistrict">Lakes District.</placeName> She was born in <placeName
ref="#Rydal">Rydal</placeName>, <placeName>Westmorland</placeName> and
married <persName>John Backhouse.</persName><lb/> Ancestry. <lb/> DMC Diary,
September 4 – 10, 1887 (Works 21), Dinah Maria Mulock Craik Collection, Harry
Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HarralHorace" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Harral</surname>
<forename>Horace</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Horace Harral</persName> was a
wood engraver, etcher, and photographer who produced numerous pieces for the
<title corresp="#IllustratedNews">Illustrated London News.</title> He was a
pupil of <persName ref="#OrrinSmithJohn">John Orrinsmith</persName> and later
formed a business partnership with <persName ref="#Orrinsmith">Harvey
Orrinsmith</persName> and <persName ref="#LintonWJ">W.J. Linton.</persName>
Harral travelled to <placeName ref="#Australia">Australia</placeName> with
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben Mulock</persName> in the <date from="1850"
to="1859">1850s.</date><lb/>NPG. <lb/> Gregory R. Suriano, The British
Pre-Raphaelite Illustrators: A History of their Published Prings (Oak Knoll P,
2005), 21–22, Web.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HarralAlfred" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Harral</surname>
<forename>Alfred</forename>
</persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Alfred Harral</persName> was a
wood engraver and etcher for the <title corresp="#IllustratedNews">Illustrated
London News.</title> He went gold-digging in <placeName ref="#Australia"
>Australia</placeName> with <persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben Mulock</persName>
in the <date from="1850" to="1859">1850s.</date><lb/>NPG.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHarral" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Harral</surname><forename>Frances</forename>
</persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Frances Harral</persName>
was a family friend of the Mulocks. She was <persName ref="#HarralHorace"
>Horace</persName> and <persName ref="#HarralAlfred">Alfred</persName>'s
mother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LintonWJ" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Linton</surname><forename>William</forename><forename>James</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1812-12-07"/>
<death when="1897-12-29"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>W.J. Linton</persName> was a
well-known nineteenth-century wood-engraver and poet. He was one of the main
engravers for the <title corresp="#IllustratedNews">Illustrated London
News.</title> Linton worked with both <persName ref="#OrrinSmithJohn"
>John</persName> and <persName ref="#Orrinsmith">Harvey
Orrinsmith</persName> as well as <persName ref="#HarralHorace">Horace
Harral.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersenHansChristian" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Anderson</surname><forename>Hans</forename><forename>Christian</forename></persName>
<birth when="1805-04-02"/>
<death when="1875-08-04"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Danish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Hans Christian
Andersen</persName> was a Danish author and playwright known for
popularizing fairy tales such as <title>The Snow Queen,</title>
<title>The Little Mermaid,</title> and <title corresp="#UglyDuckling">The Ugly
Duckling.</title></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Hermann" sex="1">
<note resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>Hermann</persName> appears to have been a
servant of <persName ref="DMC">Craik's</persName> at <placeName
ref="CornerHouse">The Corner House.</placeName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsDixon" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Dixon</surname></persName>
<note resp="AndersonHannah"><persName ref="MrsDixon">Mrs. Dixon</persName> was an
acquaintance of <persName ref="DMC">Dinah's</persName>, and she had a daughter
named <persName ref="Alice">Alice</persName>, who may have been <persName
ref="DMC">Dinah's</persName> goddaughter.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BramieriLuigi" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Bramieri</surname><forename>Luigi</forename></persName>
<birth when="1757-06-27"/>
<death when="1820-04-06"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Luigi Bramieri</persName> was
an Italian writer and biographer. <persName>Dinah</persName> translated his
tale <persName ref="#Wolfenbuttel">Sophia de Wolfenbuttel</persName> in <date
when="1845">1845,</date> and it became one of her first publications with
<orgName ref="#Chambers">Chambers.</orgName><lb/> Pino Fasano, "Bramieri,
Luigi," Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani vol. 13 (1971) Web.
<!--http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/luigi-bramieri_(Dizionario-Biografico)/--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LeslieEliza" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Leslie</surname><forename>Eliza</forename></persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Eliza Leslie</persName> was the
daughter of one of <persName ref="#MulockThomas">Thomas Mulock</persName>'s
friends. In <date when="1842">1842,</date>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> wrote to a friend that <persName>Miss
Leslie</persName> was a writer and "a talented girl."<lb/> Aleyn Lyell
Reade, The Mellards & Their Descendants, Including the Bibbys of Liverpool,
with Memoirs of Dinah Maria Mulock & Thomas Mellard Reade (London: Arden P,
1915), 64.<lb/>
<!--KF: In 1845, Dinah told W & R Chambers that she was a friend of their contributors, Mrs. S.C. Hall and Miss Leslie.
There is a Miss Leslie (Eliza Leslie) who contributed to Chambers's Journal in the 1830s and 40s. This Miss Leslie was born
in Philadelphia in 1787 and moved to England with her family from 1792 to 1798. It is certainly possible that Eliza Leslie's
father (Robert Leslie - a clock-maker) befriended Thomas Mulock during this time, but I have found no evidence to support this. --></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsWilson" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Wilson</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs Wilson</persName> seems to
have been a family friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> – likely
on <persName ref="#MulockDinah">her mother</persName>'s side. In <date
from="1844" to="1845">the later years of <persName ref="#MulockDinah">her
mother</persName>'s illness</date>, <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>
and <persName ref="#MulockDinah">her mother</persName> spent time in the
<placeName ref="#Staffordshire">Staffordshire</placeName> countryside
visiting <persName>Mrs. Wilson</persName> and <orgName ref="#Parker">the
Parkers.</orgName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SiraniElisabetta" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Sirani</surname><forename>Elisabetta</forename></persName>
<birth when="1638-01-08"/>
<death when="1665-08-28"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Elisabetta</persName> was the
titular character in <title corresp="#ElisabettaSirani">The Story of Elisabetta
Sirani</title> – a short story that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>
translated from Italian in <date when="1845">1845</date>. The real
<persName>Elisabetta Sirani</persName> was a successful Italian Baroque
painter who died unexpectedly at the age of 27 in <date when="1665"
>1665.</date> It is believed that she was poisoned by a jealous
handmaiden.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BattistaZani" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Zani</surname></persName>
<birth when="1638"/>
<death when="1665"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Battista Zani</persName> was a
central character in <title corresp="#ElisabettaSirani">The Story of Elisabetta
Sirani</title> – a short story that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>
translated from Italian in <date when="1845">1845</date>. The real
<persName>Battista Zani</persName> was an amateur painter who courted
<persName ref="#SiraniElisabetta">Elisabetta Sirani.</persName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsBrunton" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Brunton</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Brunton</persName> was a
friend of <orgName>the Craiks</orgName> at <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">the
Corner House.</placeName> She was likely married to <persName>Dr.
Brunton,</persName> who helped <orgName>the Craiks</orgName> euthanize
<persName ref="#CraikDorothy">Dorothy</persName>'s sick dog in <date
when="1882">1882.</date>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KeeneKatie" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Keene</surname><forename>Katie</forename></persName>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Katie Keene</persName> was the
daughter of the <orgName ref="#Craik">Craiks</orgName> coachman and gardener at
the <placeName ref="#CornerHouse">Corner House</placeName>, <persName
ref="#KeeneJohn">John Keene.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CroslandCamillaDufour" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Crosland</surname><surname type="maiden"
>Toulmin</surname><forename>Camila</forename><forename>Dufour</forename><addName>Mrs.
Newton Crosland</addName></persName>
<birth when="1812-06-09"/>
<death when="1895-02-16"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Camila Dufour
Crosland</persName> was a writer and a good friend of <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah's.</persName> They attended <persName ref="#LoudonJane">Jane
Loudon</persName>'s and <persName ref="#HallAnnaMaria">Anna Maria
Hall</persName>'s literary soirées together during <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName>'s early years in <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> was her bridesmaid in <date when="1848"
>1848.</date><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissWinnard" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Winnard</surname><forename>Hannah</forename></persName>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Miss Winnard</persName> was the
sister of <persName ref="#HooperJane">Jane Hooper</persName>, and cousin to
<persName>Mary</persName> and <persName ref="#CraikGeorgiana">Georgiana
Craik</persName> (whom she also lived with). After <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName>'s death, <persName>Miss Winnard</persName> provided
<persName ref="#CraikHenry">Henry Craik</persName> with a note of
remembrances. He passed that note along to <persName ref="#OliphantMargaret"
>Margaret Oliphant</persName>, and it formed the basis for her biography of
<persName ref="#DMC">Craik.</persName><lb/> Andrew Lycett, Rudyard Kipling
(Orion P, 2016) Web.
<!--KF: Available on Google books without page #s. Will have to get print copy to fill in this information.-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Townsend" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Townsend</surname><forename>Henry</forename><forename>James</forename></persName>
<birth when="1810"/>
<death when="1890"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Henry James Townsend</persName>
was trained as a surgeon but left medicine to become a painter of historical
and literary subjects. <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> became friends
with <persName>Mr. Townsend</persName> and his family when she and her family
lived in <placeName ref="#Brompton">Brompton</placeName> in <date
notBefore="1840" notAfter="1844">the early 1840s.</date> It was through
<persName>Mr. Townsend</persName> that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>
met her lifelong friend and mentor <persName ref="#HallAnnaMaria">Anna Maria
Hall.</persName><lb/> Christopher Wood, The Dictionary of Victorian Painters
(Woodbridge, England: Antique Collectors' Club, 1978), 487.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HuntLeigh" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hunt</surname><forename>James</forename><forename>Henry</forename><forename>Leigh</forename><addName>Leigh
Hunt</addName></persName>
<birth when="1784-10-19"/>
<death when="1859-09-28"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Leigh Hunt</persName> was an
English essayist, poet, and literary critic. He was, for many years, the editor
of the political newspaper <title>the Examiner</title>. However, he is
best-known for being tried and imprisoned for libel against the
<persName>Prince Regent</persName> in <date when="1813">1813.</date> It
seems that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> and <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName> were close with <persName>Leigh
Hunt</persName> and his family.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DeMorganAugustus" sex="1">
<persName><surname>De Morgan</surname><forename>Augustus</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1806-06-27"/>
<death when="1871-03-18"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Augustus De Morgan</persName>
was a mathemetician, historian, and a well-known professor at the <orgName
ref="#LondonUniversity">University of London.</orgName> He and his family
lived in <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath.</placeName><lb/>
ODNB.<lb/> Marilyn Pemberton, "Influences, Inspirations, and Expectations," Out
of the Shadows: The Life and Works of Mary De Morgan (Newcastle upon Tyne:
Cambridge Scholars, 2012) 9-13, Web.
<!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=orgwBwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA8&dq=Mary%20De%20Morgan&pg=PA14#v=onepage&q=Mary%20De%20Morgan&f=false--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DeMorganSophia" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">De Morgan</surname><surname type="maiden"
>Frend</surname><forename>Sophia</forename><forename>Elizabeth</forename></persName>
<birth when="1809"/>
<death when="1892"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Sophia De Morgan</persName> was
<persName ref="#DeMorganAugustus">Professor Augustus De Morgan's
wife.</persName>
<persName>Sophia</persName> was a keen supporter of women's higher education
and women's suffrage, campaigned on behalf of the poor, and supported the
anti-slavery lobby. She wrote social tracts on these subjects, but was better
known in the literary world for her works on nineteenth-century spiritualism
such as <title>"From Matter to Spirit."</title><lb/> ODNB.<lb/> Marilyn Marilyn
Pemberton, "Influences, Inspirations, and Expectations," Out of the Shadows:
The Life and Works of Mary De Morgan (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars,
2012) 14-31, Web.
<!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=orgwBwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA8&dq=Mary%20De%20Morgan&pg=PA14#v=onepage&q=Mary%20De%20Morgan&f=false--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DeMorganAlice" sex="2">
<persName><surname>De
Morgan</surname><forename>Elizabeth</forename><forename>Alice</forename></persName>
<birth when="1838-06-04"/>
<death when="1853-12-23"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Alice De Morgan</persName> was
the eldest child of <persName ref="#DeMorganAugustus">Augustus</persName> and
<persName ref="#DeMorganSophia">Sophia De Morgan.</persName> In <date
when="1853">1853</date>, at the age of 15, Alice died of a cold following a
severe case of the measles.<lb/> Marilyn Marilyn Pemberton, "The Fifties and
Sixties: Sisters, Dead and Live," Out of the Shadows: The Life and Works of
Mary De Morgan (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2012) 32-46, Web.
<!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=orgwBwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA8&dq=Mary%20De%20Morgan&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q=Alice&f=false--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHayden">
<persName><surname type="married"
>Hayden</surname><forename>Maria</forename><forename>B</forename><addName>Mrs.
W. R. Hayden</addName></persName>
<birth when="1826-11-16"/>
<death when="1883-02-11"/>
<!--<occupation>Medium</occupation>-->
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Hayden</persName> was the
first American medium to work in <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>,
beginning in <date when="1852">1852.</date> She is widely credited for bringing
spiritualism to Victorian <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName> and was
influential to emerging English writers such as <persName ref="#DeMorganSophia"
>Sophia De Morgan.</persName><lb/> Ancestry.<lb/> "Hayden, Maria B. (ca.
1852)." Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Encyclopedia.com. (May 5,
2017).
<!--http://www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/hayden-maria-b-ca-1852--><lb/>
Marilyn Marilyn Pemberton, "Influences, Inspirations, and Expectations," Out of
the Shadows: The Life and Works of Mary De Morgan (Newcastle upon Tyne:
Cambridge Scholars, 2012) 26-27, Web.
<!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=orgwBwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA8&dq=Mary%20De%20Morgan&pg=PA14#v=onepage&q=Mary%20De%20Morgan&f=false-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrownSamuel" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Brown</surname><forename>Samuel</forename></persName>
<birth when="1817-02-23"/>
<death when="1856-09-20"/>
<occupation>Scientist</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>Dr. Samuel Brown</persName> was
an apparent friend of <persName ref="DMC">Dinah's</persName> and a well known
chemist. He also wrote and published scientific essays.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BrownHelen" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>Helen Brown</persName> née
Littlejohn was the wife and cousin of <persName ref="BrownSamuel">Dr. Samuel
Brown.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissLamb" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>Miss Lamb</persName> was an
acquaintance of <persName ref="DMC">Dinah's</persName> who brought the news of
the birth of <persName ref="BrownSamuel">Dr. Samuel Brown</persName>'s
daughter, <persName>Spring</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackwoodWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Blackwood</surname><forename>William</forename></persName>
<birth when="1836-07-13"/>
<death when="1912-11-15"/>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>William Blackwood</persName> was
in charge of the <placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#London">London</placeName>
office of <title corresp="CraikSiteIndex.xml#BlackwoodsMagazine">Blackwood's
Edinburgh Magazine,</title> which he assumed full responsbility of in <date
when="1879">1879.</date><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackwoodJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Blackwood</surname><forename>John</forename></persName>
<birth when="1818-12-07"/>
<death when="1879-10-29"/>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="AndersonHannah"><persName>John Blackwood</persName>, the
uncle of <persName ref="#BlackwoodWilliam">William Blackwood</persName>,
assumed control of <title corresp="#BlackwoodsMagazine">Blackwoods
publishing</title> in <date when="1852">1852,</date> and strengthened the
firm's influence in the Victorian literary scene.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrSimpson" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="YoungCharlesMayne" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Young</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename>
<forename>Mayne</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1777-01-10"/>
<death when="1856-05-29"/>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Charles Mayne Young</persName>
was an English actor — best known for his performances as Hamlet — who acted in
multiple theatres in <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName><lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="StanhopeAnne" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Stanhope</surname>
<forename>Anne</forename>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1802-11-07"/>
<death when="1885-08-27"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Anne Stanhope</persName> was
countess of <placeName ref="#Chesterfield">Chesterfield</placeName>.<lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RichardsonSirBenjamin" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Richardson</surname>
<forename>Sir Benjamin</forename>
<forename>Ward</forename></persName>
<birth when="1828-10-31"/>
<death when="1896-11-21"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Sir Benjamin Ward
Richardson</persName> extensively researched anaesthetics, and was greatly
involved in public health. He also founded and edited the first journal
dedicated to public health.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SevernWalter" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Severn</surname>
<forename>Walter</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830-10-12"/>
<death when="1904-09-22"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Walter Severn</persName> was
well-known for his watercolour painting, including nature paintings and book
illustration, though he lacked formal training. <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName> and <persName ref="#PatonNoel">Noel Paton</persName> both
thought he was not a particularly strong artist.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KeatsJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Keats</surname><forename>John</forename></persName>
<birth when="1795-12-18"/>
<death when="1821-02-23"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>John Keats</persName>, who gave
up a medical career for a literary one, faced contemporary criticism and
political attacks, and was only celebrated as a poet after his death.<lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissBlyth" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Blyth</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Popham</forename>
<addName>May Beverley</addName>
<!--KF: May Beverley is a diminuative of Miss Blyth's first name and her place of birth (Beverley, Yorkshire).-->
</persName>
<birth when="1831"/>
<death when="1915"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="CraikSiteIndex.xml#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Miss Blyth (pseud. May
Beverley)</persName> was a writer who primarly produced literature for young
people. Dinah read and reviewed her works when she was working as a publisher's
reader for <title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan Magazine</title>
<date when="1860" precision="high">c. 1860.</date><lb/> "Mary Popham Blyth:
Author Information," Circulating Library, Web.
<!--http://www.victorianresearch.org/atcl/show_author.php?aid=2129-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrStorrar" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Storrar</surname><forename>John</forename></persName>
<birth when="1811-12-29"/>
<death when="1886-03-06"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Dr. John Storrar</persName> was a close
friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> who worked as an M.D. and sat
on the senate of <orgName ref="#LondonUniversity">the University of
London.</orgName> He stood in for <persName ref="#MulockThomas">her
father</persName> and gave her away at her wedding in <date when="1865"
>1865.</date>
<lb/> Reade, The Mellards & Their Descendents, 88.<lb/> "Obituary," Annual
Register of World Events: A Review of the Year 1886 vol. 128, ed. Edmund Burke
(London: Rivingtons, 1887) 133, Web. <!--Google Books-->
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissMontgomery" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Montgomery</surname><forename>Mary</forename><forename>Millicent</forename></persName>
<death when="1868-03-21"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Miss Montgomery</persName> was
a friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s and <persName
ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford</persName>'s who lived at <placeName
ref="#ClockHouse">the Clock House</placeName> in <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath.</placeName>
<persName ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura</persName> lived with her while attending
the <placeName ref="#RoyalAcademy">Royal Academy,</placeName> and was one of
the executors of her will.<lb/>
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BraidwoodJames" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Braidwood</surname><forename>James</forename></persName>
<birth when="1800-09-03"/>
<death when="1861-06-22"/>
<occupation>Tradesperson<!--Firefighter--></occupation>
<occupation>Engineer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>James Braidwood</persName> was the
superintendent of the <orgName>London Fire Engine Establishment</orgName> at
the time of the <rs type="event" ref="#TooleyStreetFire">Tooley Street
Fire</rs> in <date when="1861">1861.</date> Braidwood died in the fire after
being crushed by debris. Among his mourners was <persName>Dinah's</persName>
family friend, <persName ref="#LovellGeorge">George Lovell.</persName><lb/>"The
Great Fire," Times (London), Tuesday, June 25, 1861, pg. 9; Issue 23968.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsEarl" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Earl</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Earl</persName> might have been a
landlady or a housekeeper of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> at
<placeName ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood.</placeName> She painted the exterior or
<placeName ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood</placeName> in <date when="1861"
>1861.</date></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Wallinger" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wallinger</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="Spurgeon" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Spurgeon</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Spurgeon</persName> was a preacher whom
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s <orgName ref="#MulockAunts">Mulock
Aunts</orgName> greatly admired.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MarstonNelly" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Marston</surname><forename>Nelly</forename></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsJames" sex="2">
<persName><surname>James</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. James</persName> was <persName
ref="#MissJames">Marian James</persName>'s mother.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SmithPriestly" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Smith</surname><forename>Joseph</forename><forename>Priestly</forename></persName>
<birth when="1846"/>
<death when="1933"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Priestly Smith</persName> was <persName
ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford</persName>'s maternal
cousin.<lb/><!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HerfordWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Herford</surname><forename>William</forename><forename>Henry</forename></persName>
<birth when="1820-10-20"/>
<death when="1908-04-27"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>William Herford</persName> was
the older brother of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> friend <persName
ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford.</persName></note>
<!--KF: Now I'm wondering if this is the right one. The writers of the ODNB were confused about how many brothers she had named William. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrGarlick" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Garlick</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsGarlick" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Garlick</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrCumming" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Cumming</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsSingleton" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Singleton</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"/>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsReid" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Reid</surname></persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Reid</persName> was a long-time
friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend <persName
ref="#MartinFrances">Fanny Martin</persName>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissBathurst" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Bathurst</surname></persName>
<death when="1862"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Miss Bathurst</persName> was a friend of
<persName ref="#MrsReid">Mrs. Reid</persName>'s who died suddenly in <date
when="1861">1861.</date> She was living in <placeName ref="#Belgium"
>Belgium</placeName> at the time of her death.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrSimpson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Simpson</surname><forename>James</forename><forename>Young</forename><roleName>Sir</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1811-06-07"/>
<death when="1870-05-06"/>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Sir James Young Simpson</persName> was a
distinguished Scottish obstetrician. He is famous for being the first to
discover the use chloroform as an anaesthetic in <date when="1847">1847</date>.
<persName>Dr. Simpson</persName> was apparently an old friend of <persName
ref="#DrStorrar">Dr. Storrar's</persName> – the man who gave <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> away at her wedding.<lb/> John Duns, ed.,
"Letters of Codolence," Memoir of Sir James Y. Simpson, Bart., M.D.,
(Edinburgh: Edmonston & Douglas, 1873) 535, Web. <!--Google Books--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsSimpson" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Simpson</surname><forename>Janet</forename><addName>Jessie</addName></persName>
<birth when="1812-02-06"/>
<death when="1870-06-07"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Simpson</persName> was a friend of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> acquaintance <persName
ref="#MrsStorrar">Mrs. Storrar</persName>. Both their husbands were doctors.<lb/>
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsStorrar" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="maiden">Warren</surname><surname type="married"
>Storrar</surname><forename>Lucy</forename></persName>
<birth when="1812" precision="medium"/>
<death when="1881-03-14"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Lucy Storrar</persName> was married to
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> close friend, <persName
ref="#DrStorrar">Dr. John Storrar.</persName> She and her family lived near
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> for some time at <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath.</placeName><lb/>
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsLaing" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="maiden">West</surname><surname type="married"
>Laing</surname><forename>Mary</forename><forename>Elizabeth</forename></persName>
<birth when="1804" precision="medium"/>
<death when="1886-04-21"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Jamaican</nationality>
<!--KF: Mary Elizabeth West was born in Jamaica-->
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mary Elizabeth Laing</persName>
was a friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> and the wife of the
<persName ref="#LaingRevDavid">Reverend David Laing.</persName> She and her
family lived near <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> at <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath.</placeName><lb/> "Rev. David Laing,"
Legacies of British Slave-ownership database, UCL, Web. <!--http://wwwdepts-live.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/view/43565/--><lb/>
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LaingDavid" sex="1">
<!--KF: an update! already exists-->
<persName><surname>Laing</surname><forename>David</forename></persName>
<birth notAfter="1860" precision="medium"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>David Laing</persName> was the young son
of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend <persName ref="#MrsLaing"
>Mrs. Laing</persName>. His father, <persName ref="#LaingRevDavid">Reverend
Laing</persName>, was also named David.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LaingRevDavid" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Laing</surname><forename>David</forename><roleName>Reverend</roleName></persName>
<birth when="1800-09-30"/>
<death when="1860-08-06"/>
<occupation>Clergyman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Reverend David Laing</persName> was a
Church of England Clergyman. He helped re-found and fund the
<orgName>Governesses' Benevolent Institution</orgName>
<date when="1843" precision="medium">c. 1843</date> – an organization that
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> contributed to with proceeds from her
novel, <title>Bread upon the Waters: A Governess's Life</title> (<date
when="1852">1852</date>).<lb/> "Rev. David Laing," Legacies of British
Slave-ownership database, UCL, Web. <!--http://wwwdepts-live.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/view/43565/--><lb/>
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ChambersMary" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="maiden">Chambers</surname><surname type="married"
>Edwards</surname><forename>Mary</forename></persName>
<birth when="1833-11-09"/>
<death when="1861-07-30"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mary Chambers</persName> was a daughter of
<persName ref="#ChambersRobert">Robert</persName> and <persName
ref="#ChambersAnne">Anne Chambers.</persName> She married a teaching doctor
named <persName>Alexander McKenzie Edwards</persName> in <date when="1856"
>1856</date>, and left behind three children when she died at the age of
twenty-seven.<lb/> William Chambers, "His Last Days, Death, and Character,"
Memoir of Robert Chambers with Autobiographic Reminiscences of William Chambers
(New York: Scribner, Armstrong, and Co., 1872) 307, Web.
<!--KF: Available on archive.org--><lb/> "Letter from Lawson Tait to Charles
Darwin, 1 March 1876," Correspondence of Charles Darwin vol. 24, supplement
1838–1875, eds. Frederick Burkhardt and James A. Secord (Cambridge P, 1876) 28,
Web. <!--KF: Available on Google Books-->
<!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsTomlinson" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="maiden">Windsor</surname><surname type="married"
>Tomlinson</surname><forename>Sarah</forename></persName>
<birth when="1810" precision="medium"/>
<death when="1872"/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mrs. Tomlinson</persName> and her husband
<persName ref="#MrTomlinson">Charles</persName> lived in <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath</placeName> and were acquaintances of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's.</persName> They seem to have also known
<persName ref="#LovellMinna">Minna,</persName>
<persName ref="#MissJames">Marian,</persName> and <orgName ref="#Ziepel">the
Ziepels.</orgName>
<persName>Sarah</persName> hosted Saturday evening parties which were
frequented by scientists, writers, and artists, including <persName
ref="#DeMorganAugustus">Professor Augustus De Morgan</persName> and
<persName ref="#OliphantMargaret">Margaret Oliphant.</persName><lb/>
Frederick Kurzer, "The Life and Work of Charles Tomlinson FRS: a Career in
Victorian Science and Technology," Notes Rec. Royal Society of London
58.2(2004): 203–226, Web.
<!--http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/roynotesrec/58/2/203.full.pdf?origin=publication_detail--><lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrTomlinson" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Tomlinson</surname><forename>Charles</forename></persName>
<birth when="1808-11-27"/>
<death when="1897-02-15"/>
<occupation>Scientist</occupation>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mr. Tomlinson</persName> was an eminent
experimental scientist and lecturer at <orgName>King's College</orgName>,
<placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> Later in his life, he turned to
literary subjects and became the first <persName>Dante</persName> lecturer at
the <orgName ref="#LondonUniversity">University of London.</orgName> Throughout
his life, <persName>Mr. Tomlinson</persName> had a close relationship with the
publisher, <persName ref="#ParkerJohnWilliam">J. W. Parker.</persName> He and
<persName ref="#MrsTomlinson">his wife</persName> lived in <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead</placeName>
<date from="1856" to="1866">from 1856 to 1866</date> and were friends with
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah.</persName> It seems that he also knew <persName
ref="#MulockThomas">her father</persName> and her <orgName
ref="#MulockAunts">aunts</orgName> in some capactiy before that. <lb/>
Frederick Kurzer, "The Life and Work of Charles Tomlinson FRS: a Career in
Victorian Science and Technology," Notes Rec. Royal Society of London
58.2(2004): 203–226, Web.
<!--http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/roynotesrec/58/2/203.full.pdf?origin=publication_detail--><lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GriffinJohn" sex="M">
<persName><surname>Griffin</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Joseph</forename></persName>
<birth when="1802-01-22"/>
<death when="1877-06-09"/>
<occupation>Scientist</occupation>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>John Joseph Griffin</persName> was a publisher as well as a
well-known chemist and educator. He wrote and translated a Polytechnic Library
series. <persName>John Joseph Griffin</persName> was a part proprietor of
<orgName ref="#GriffinCo">Richard Griffin & Co</orgName> publishing
alongside his brother <persName>Richard</persName>, but relinquished control to
his nephew <persName ref="#GriffinCharles">Charles Griffin</persName> in <date
when="1852">1852.</date><lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GriffinRichard" sex="M">
<persName><surname>Griffin</surname>
<forename>Richard</forename>
<forename>Thomas</forename></persName>
<birth when="1790"/>
<death when="1832"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Richard Griffin</persName> was a
British publisher and co-founder of <orgName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GriffinCo"
>Richard Griffin & Co.</orgName> publishing. The original company was
founded in partnership with <persName>Thomas Tegg</persName> in <date
when="1820">1820.</date><lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GriffinCharles" sex="M">
<persName><surname>Griffin</surname>
<forename>Charles</forename></persName>
<birth when="1819"/>
<death when="1862"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Charles Griffin</persName> was a
British publisher and son of <persName ref="#GriffinRichard">Richard
Griffin</persName>. He was given <rs type="person"
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GriffinJohn">his uncle's</rs> part of <orgName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GriffinCo">Richard Griffin & Co.</orgName> in
<date when="1852">1852.</date><lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MahonyFrancisSylvester" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Mahony</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
<forename>Sylvester</forename>
<addName>Father Prout</addName></persName>
<birth when="1804-12-31"/>
<death when="1866-05-18"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Francis Sylvester
Mahony</persName> was a satiric poet and journalist, and often wrote under
the pseudonym <persName>Father Prout.</persName> He frequently published in
<title corresp="#BentleysMiscellany">Bentley's
Miscellany.</title><lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SevernJoseph" sex="M">
<persName><surname>Severn</surname>
<forename>Joseph</forename></persName>
<birth when="1793-12-07"/>
<death when="1879-08-03"/>
<occupation>Artist</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Joseph Severn</persName>, father
of <persName ref="#SevernWalter">Walter Severn,</persName> was a skilled artist
best known for painting a deathbead portrait of his good friend <persName
ref="#KeatsJohn">John Keats</persName>. He received a Royal Academy student
gold medal for his painting "<title>The Cave of
Despair</title>."<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MontefioreSirMoses" sex="M">
<persName><surname>Montefiore</surname>
<forename>Moses</forename>
<forename>Haim</forename></persName>
<birth when="1784-10-24"/>
<death when="1885-07-28"/>
<occupation>Civil Servant</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<nationality>Jewish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Sir Moses Haim
Montefiore</persName> worked as a clerk and a stockbroker before becoming
president of the <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> Commitee of
Deputies of British Jews. He was a well-known public figure in <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> particularly in his old
age.<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="KingGeorgeIII" sex="M">
<persName>
<forename>George</forename>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
<roleName>King</roleName>
<addName>King George III of Hanover</addName></persName>
<birth when="1738-05-24"/>
<death when="1820-01-29"/>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Monarch</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>King George III</persName> was
King of of <placeName>Great Britain</placeName> and <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland</placeName> and later the <placeName ref="#UnitedKingdom">United
Kingdom</placeName>
<date from="1760" to="1820">from 1760 to 1820</date>, and was the grandfather
of <persName>Queen Victoria.</persName><lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="QueenCharlotte" sex="F">
<persName>
<forename>Sophia</forename>
<forename>Charlotte</forename>
<addName>Queen Charlotte of Hanover</addName>
<addName>Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</addName></persName>
<birth when="1744-05-19"/>
<death when="1818-11-17"/>
<nationality>German</nationality>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<occupation>Monarch</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Queen Charlotte</persName> was
Queen of <placeName>Great Britain</placeName> and <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland</placeName> and later the <placeName ref="#UnitedKingdom">United
Kingdom</placeName>
<date from="1761" to="1818">from 1761 to 1818</date> by way of her marriage to
<persName ref="#KingGeorgeIII">King George III.</persName> She was entrusted
with the care of the King's household and person following the Regency Act of
<date when="1811">1811</date>. She was well-known for her generosity and
extensive book collection.<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CummingsWilliamHayman" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Cummings</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
<forename>Hayman</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831-08-22"/>
<death when="1915-06-06"/>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>W. H. Cummings</persName> was a
well-known English singer and music teacher. He taught at <orgName>the Royal
Normal School</orgName> and <orgName>the School for the Blind</orgName>, and
later became the principal of the <orgName>Guildhall School of Music.</orgName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> extant letters suggest that she
befriended <persName>Cummings</persName> later in her life – probably in <date
notBefore="1870" notAfter="1879">the 1870s</date>. She considered him a very
talented singer. She sent him songs in the mail, introduced him to people in
her literary network, and notified him of up-and-coming musical talents.
<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CummingsClara" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Hobbs</surname>
<surname type="Cummings">Cummings</surname>
<forename>Clara</forename>
<forename>Anne</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1834-05-14"/>
<death when="1914-02" precision="high"/>
<!--KF: Buried 7 Feb 1914-->
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Clara Cummings</persName> was
married to the singer <persName ref="#CummingsWilliamHayman">W. H.
Cummings.</persName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> admired <persName
ref="#CummingsWilliamHayman">Cummings</persName> and seemed to be amicable
with <rs type="person">his wife.</rs><lb/> ODNB.<lb/><!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="GermanReedPriscilla" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Reed</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Horton</surname>
<forename>Priscilla</forename>
<addName>Priscilla German Reed</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1818-01-02"/>
<death when="1895-03-18"/>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Priscilla German
Reed</persName> was a famous English singer and actress. Beginning in <date
when="1854">1854,</date>
<persName>Priscilla</persName> and her pianist husband, <persName>German
Reed</persName> toured <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName> as a
travelling show called "<title>Mr and Mrs German Reed's Entertainment</title>."
They made a living this way for most of their life, fostering talented young
singers, actors, and musicians along the way. <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName> seems to have at least know of <orgName>the German
Reeds,</orgName> though it is unclear if they had any sort of
relationship.<lb/>ODNB.<lb/><!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AbrahamPhilip" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Abraham</surname>
<forename>Philip</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1803-01-01" precision="medium"/>
<death when="1890-12-18"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<nationality>Jewish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Philip Abraham</persName> was
father to the singer <persName ref="#BrahamLeonora">Leonora Braham.</persName>
<persName>Philip Abraham</persName> lived in <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName> and was a Professor of Hebrew. He was a prolific writer
on Jewish subjects and regularly contributed to the <title>Jewish
Chronicle.</title> He also spent some time as the Secretary for the
<orgName>West Jewish Synagogue of British Jews.</orgName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> was under the impression that he was
quite poor.<lb/><!--Ancestry--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="SterlingAntoinette" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">MacKinlay</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Sterling</surname>
<forename>Antoinette</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1843-01-23" precision="low"/>
<death when="1904-01-10"/>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Antoinette Sterling
MacKinlay</persName> was a famous American contralto singer who performed
regularly at important venues such as the <placeName>Crystal
Palace</placeName>, <placeName>Royal Albert Hall</placeName> and
<placeName>Exeter Hall</placeName>. She even performed before
<persName>Queen Victoria</persName> in <date when="1874">1874.</date> She
was once a student of <persName ref="#CummingsWilliamHayman">W. H.
Cummings</persName> in <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> (<date
notBefore="1868" notAfter="1871">c. 1868</date>).<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LemmensSherringtonHelen" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Lemmens-Sherrington</surname>
<forename>Helen</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1834-10-04"/>
<death when="1906-05-09"/>
<occupation>Musician</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Helen
Lemmens-Sherrington</persName> was a famous English soprano singer. She had
tremendous success in <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>
<date from="1860" to="1879">from 1860 to 1879,</date> touring constantly as a
way to support her family when <rs type="person">her husband</rs>'s work as a
musician wasn't enough. In <date when="1879">1879,</date> she moved to
<placeName ref="#Brussels">Brussels</placeName> with her husband to teach
singing at a conservatory.<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BoothMaryLouise" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Booth</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Louise</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831-04-19"/>
<death when="1889-03-04"/>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mary Louise Booth</persName>
worked for <orgName ref="#Harpers">Harper & Brothers</orgName> publishing.
She was the editor of <title>Harper's Bazaar</title>
<date from="1867" to="1889">from 1867 until her death in 1889.</date><lb/>
Madeleine B. Stern, "Booth, Mary Louise (Apr. 19, 1831-Mar. 5, 1889)," in
Notable American Women: 1607-1950, edited by Edward T. James, Janet Wilson
James, and Paul S. Boyer, Harvard UP, 1971, Web.
<!--http://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/hupnawi/booth_mary_louise_apr_19_1831_mar_5_1889/0?institutionId=261--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ParrLouisa" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Parr</surname>
<forename>Louisa</forename>
<forename>Sarah</forename>
<forename>Ann</forename>
<addName>Mrs. Olinthus Lobb</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1848" precision="low"/>
<death when="1903-11-02"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Louisa Parr</persName> was an
English novelist who wrote a memoir of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah
Craik</persName> for <orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett's</orgName>
<title>Women Novelists of Queen Victoria's Reign</title> (<date when="1897"
>1897</date>). The memoir included an analytical overview of <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s writing, including commentary on the
restraints placed on women's writers of the era.<lb/>ODNB.<lb/>Sally Mitchell,
"Selected Bibliography," Dinah Mulock Craik (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983),
138.</note>
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="StubEntriesPeople">
<!-- The following are all stub entries to be defined/researched and developed -->
<head>Stub Entries for Historical People</head>
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="LongfellowHenryWadsworth" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="SewellElizabeth" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="ParrHarriet" sex="2">
<persName>
<addName>Holme Lee</addName>
</persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="FitzgeraldMrs" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="HollandMrs" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MrsJerrold" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="Annette" sex="2">
<!-- PU45 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ArchibaldLou" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Archibald</surname>
<addName>Lou</addName>
<!-- KF: forename might be Louise or Louisa? -->
</persName>
<!-- PU43 Princeton Parrish Collection. Lou is somehow connected to Anna Maria and Samuel Carter Hall. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Arlice" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Arlice seems to have been one of Dinah's
servants at Wildwood.</note>
<!-- PU45 Princeton Parrish Collection. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrBarret" sex="1">
<!-- PU45 Princeton Parrish Collection. Lives in Glasgow. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Betty" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Betty was one of the three young girls to
whom Dinah dedicated "<title corresp="#HowToWinLove">How to Win Love, or
Rhoda's Lesson</title>."<lb/>
<!-- PU38 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Frances" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Frances was one of the three young girls
to whom Dinah dedicated "<title corresp="#HowToWinLove">How to Win Love, or
Rhoda's Lesson</title>."<lb/>
<!-- PU38 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Jeannie" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Jeannie was one of the three young girls
to whom Dinah dedicated "<title corresp="#HowToWinLove">How to Win Love, or
Rhoda's Lesson</title>."<lb/>
<!-- PU38 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrLaing" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Laing</surname><forename>David</forename></persName>
<birth when="1793"/>
<death when="1878-10-18"/>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>David Laing</persName> was a Scottish
writer, editor, and bookseller.<lb/> Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English
Literature from 1830 to 1882, fourth ed., ed. Robert Carruthers, LL. D.
(Edinburgh: W. & R. Chambers, 1894) 785, Web.
<!--KF: This title is on Google Books--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Willie" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Willie was likely one of Dinah's servants
at Wildwood.</note>
<!-- PU45 Princeton Parrish Collection. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Marion" sex="2">
<!-- PU56 Princeton Parrish Collection -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWallis" sex="1">
<!-- PU62 Princeton Parrish Collection-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissRodick" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissWilkinson" sex="2">
<!-- PU64 Princeton Parrish Collection-->
<!-- KF: Miss Wilkinson might be Miss Sarah Wilkinson. See Finding Aid for Mulock Family Papers: http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0k4003cw/entire_text/ -->
<!-- KB: this is likely correct, the Miss Wilkinson who was friends with Dinah in the Corner House days and helped her adopt Dorothy -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWalton" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="MrsWalton" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MrsWylie" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MrsLinos" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Linos appears to be a music
instructor who helped with Dinah Craik's glee club <date notBefore="1862"
notAfter="1863">c. 1862</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissMarchall" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissMeugius" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Meugius</surname>
<addName>N.R.E.M.</addName>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">This name is noted by an unknown hand on
letter PU34 in the Princeton Parrish Collection. Miss Meugius is said to be a
friend of <persName ref="#MissMarchall">Miss Marchall</persName>'s and an
aspiring translator.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsRankine" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Rankine</surname>
</persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Amalia" sex="2"/>
<!-- KF: These are all stub entries from the UCLA letters. They still need to be researched/developed. Some might need to be combined with other entries, so I have listed which letter each entry appears in. -->
<person xml:id="MulockFrancis" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Mulock</surname>
<forename>Francis</forename>
<forename>John</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1853"/>
<death when="1886"/>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Dinah had a letter from Mrs. Mulock around
August 1887 in which she mentions her son Francis is dead. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeKate" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Kate</forename>
<surname>Pike</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Kate and her sister <persName
ref="#PikeLily">Lily</persName> are cousins of the <orgName ref="#Pike"
>Pike</orgName> sisters. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeLily" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Lily</forename>
<surname>Pike</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Lily and her sister <persName
ref="#PikeKate">Kate</persName> are cousins of the <orgName ref="#Pike"
>Pike</orgName> sisters. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHomfray" sex="2">
<persName>
<surname>Homfray</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">In one of Dinah's letters, she mentions Mrs.
Homfray will give them an address to stay in Rome. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarrowIda" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Ida</forename>
<surname>Barrow</surname>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Ida was a friend of the Craiks. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Emma" sex="2">
<persName>
<forename>Emma</forename>
<surname/>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Emma seems to have been a servant of
Dinah's.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CromwellOliver" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Cromwell</surname>
<forename>Robert</forename>
<forename>Edward</forename>
</persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="DeCervantesMiguel" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>De Cervantes</surname>
<forename>Miguel</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Miguel de Cervantes was a seventeenth-century
Spanish writer.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Eunice" sex="2">
<persName>Eunice</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Referred to as Aunt Eunice</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Jamie"/>
<person xml:id="Adam" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="MrsScott" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissMcDounell" sex="2">
<persName>Miss McDounell</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Miss McDounell owned a horse that Dinah once
planned to borrow.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HooperMaggie" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Maggie Hooper lived in Shortlands,
Kent.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="DrPhillips" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="Jessie" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Jessie was a young servant of the Craiks in
the 1880s in the Corner House.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Katie" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Katie was a servant of the Craiks in the
1880s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CoxMrs" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissParker" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissHavford" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="David" sex="1">
<!-- JP: The French painter-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MarieAntoinette" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="DybeenMrs" sex="2">
<occupation>Servant</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Mrs. Dybeen was the housekeeper at Dinah
Craik's cottage in Dover.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="CanningGeorge" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.8-->
</person>
<person xml:id="DrB" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.15-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrP" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.15-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissP" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.19-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrH" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrMuskett" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.18-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsMuskett" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.18-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Mary" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.15-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWallinger" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.8-->
</person>
<person xml:id="ThynneJohnAlexander" sex="1">
<persName>
<surname>Thynne</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Alexander</forename>
<addName>Marques of Bath</addName>
</persName>
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="HornerRichard" sex="1">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Richard Horner was Dinah's great-uncle.
He was the brother of Dinah's grandmother, <persName ref="#MulockMaria">Maria
(Horner) Mulock.</persName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MulockHarriet" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"> According to Dinah's aunt <persName
ref="#MulockAlicia">Alicia</persName>, Harriet Mulock was the sister of
Dinah's paternal grandfather, <persName ref="#MulockRobert">Robert
Mulock.</persName>
</note>
</person>
<!-- JP: The following 6 Dobells are from a geneaology website, haven't run into them in the letters so much http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Dobell-Family-Tree-23 -->
<person xml:id="DobellEdmund" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="DobellIsabella" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="DobellClara" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="DobellClerma" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="DobellHorace" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="DobellCyrus" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="LordRaglan" sex="1">
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Bessie" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsKirkess" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsDunsmeath" sex="2">
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Alice" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy01, 31 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Hermione" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy01 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissOxlade" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy02 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="PikeWilliam" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy03 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="RankinJessie" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy03, 13, 15, 16, 18, 21, 29 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Is this the same person as xml:id="MissRankin"? or is it the same as xml:id="Jessie"? (i.e. friend at Wemyss Bay or servant at the Corner House?) -->
</person>
<person xml:id="CarrComyns" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy04 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Rose" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy04, 23, 33 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsBradbury" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy04 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ShawMiss" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MacdougallMiss" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="RankinMrs" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="RankinMr" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="RankinSarah" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="HoddartMiss" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Hunter" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Katherine" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05, 06, 07, 21, 26 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same person as xml:id="MiersKatherine" and xml:id="Kath." -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Bertha" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy05, 15, 16, 23, 29 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="PatonDonaldNoel" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy06 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Jeanie" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy07, 13 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Could Jeanie be the same "Jeannie" that Dinah dedicated _How to Win Love, or, Rhoda's Lesson_ to? -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Emmie" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy09, 19, 28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsDobbs" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SwanCameron" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy10 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsMulock" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Mulock was the mother of <persName
ref="#MulockFrancis">Francis Mulock.</persName>
<!-- Dorothy12 UCLA -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsWhite" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy12 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissStoddart" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy13, 14, 15, 25, 26 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissEade" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy13 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersSusan" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy13 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissAtkinson" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy14 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsMacdonald" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy14 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="DrFullarton" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy14 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Margery" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy15 and 16 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Charlie" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy15 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissAlderman" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy16 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="HarrisKatherine" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy16, 25, 27 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same as xml:id="Katherine" and xml:id="Kath." -->
</person>
<person xml:id="StoddartMary" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy16 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same as xml:id="MissStoddart." -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrMartin" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy17, 25 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsReed" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy17 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissReed" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy17 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissAllen" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy17, 24 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Poosa">
<!-- Dorothy17 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Keene">
<!-- Dorothy17 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same as xml:id="KeeneJohn"? She refers to this person by last name only. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsKennedy" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy18 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Russell" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy18 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Kath" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy19, 24 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: A nickname. This might be the same as xml:id="Katherine"? and xml:id="MiersKatherine." -->
</person>
<person xml:id="LewinHarold" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy19 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="LewinEdith" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy19, 21 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsAnderson" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy19 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonMary" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy19, 25 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="QueenElizabethI" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy19 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SpringettHerbert" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Jumbo">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="HolmesSophia" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Jennie" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SandsRoland" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SandsLily" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissSands" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsParsons" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsVizard" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Beethoven" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsWarner" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy24 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Poussie">
<!-- Dorothy24 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same nickname as xml:id="Poosa" or maybe related somehow?-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsWarren" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy24 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="SirRichard" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy24 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Eliza" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#ParkerJanice">Eliza was one of Dinah's servants.
<!-- Dorothy25 UCLA -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrAnderson" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy25 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHarris" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy25 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ColvilHelen" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy25, 27 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Mayday">
<!-- Dorothy25, 27 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Mayday is likely a nickname. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Daisy" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Lily" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same person as xml:id="SandsLily" or xml:id="PikeLily." -->
</person>
<person xml:id="ColgateDorothy" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="AingerAlfred" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="BrownRichard" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Barnes">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Dinah refers to Barnes by last name only -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Wellstead">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Dinah refers to Wellstead by last name only -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Ferris">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Dinah refers to Ferris by last name only -->
</person>
<person xml:id="PhillipsRobert" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="GeneralGordon" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="TennysonEmily" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lady Tennyson was married to <persName
ref="#TennysonAlfred">Alfred Lord Tennyson.</persName>
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsAlston" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissWhite" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissCox" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrSkinner" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="AtkinsonFred" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy28 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrCockerell" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy29 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Janie" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy29 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Marjery" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy29 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Idol">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Referred to as "a figure in a dream." Perhaps a reference to God. It might be better to remove this entry and not code "Idol" at all. -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MorleyJohn" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="PilkingtonHenryMulock">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Charlotte" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy31 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Jim" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy31 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="BramstonJohn" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="DavidJacques-Louis" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="Sarah" sex="2">
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Sarah was the cook for <orgName
ref="#MacmillanFamily">the Macmillan's.</orgName>
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsLane" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: This might be the same Mrs. Lane as xml:id="LaneMary"? -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissLane" sex="2">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="DukeOfCambridge" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy33 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="NewdigateEdward" sex="1">
<!-- Dorothy33 UCLA -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissScott" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Scott</surname></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mentioned in PU83. Envelope in
PU82.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissCooke" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Cooke</surname></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mentioned in PU84.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsBarnett" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Barnett</surname></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mentioned in PU85.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissSmith" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Smith</surname></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mentioned in PU88.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Maxwell" sex="1">
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mentioned in PU89.</note>-->
</person>
<!-- KF: The following 3 Stub Entries are from UCLATM01 -->
<person xml:id="MrsBrown" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Brown</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mrs. Brown was an acquaintance of the
Mulock family. She lived in <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> It
seems that she helped to care for <persName>Thomas Mulock Jr.</persName>'s
horse, <persName>Nell</persName>, while he was at away at sea.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Bob" sex="1">
<persName><forename cert="medium">Robert</forename>
<addName>Bob</addName></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bob seems to have been a friend of the Mulocks. He likely lived in London. In UCLATM01 (1846), Thomas Mulcok Jr. asks his brother Ben to "remember him to Bob and Thompson."</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Thompson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Thompson</surname></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Thompson seems to have been a friend of the Mulocks. He likely lived in London. In UCLATM01 (1846), Thomas Mulcok Jr. asks his brother Ben to "remember him to Bob and Thompson."</note>-->
</person>
<!--KF: The Following 22 Stub Entries are from UCLADM25 -->
<person xml:id="MrsAllen" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MissHorne" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MacphersonRobert" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="DomPedroII" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="MrSankey" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="ReadeThomasMellard" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="LeeWilliam" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lee</surname><forename>William</forename></persName>
<note><persName>William Lee</persName> was married to <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName>'s cousin <persName ref="#ReadeElizabeth">Elizabeth
(Lizzie) Reade.</persName></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LeeMuriel" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MottClara" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MrsMott" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="ParkerEmma" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Parker</surname><surname type="maiden"
>Mellard</surname><forename>Emma</forename>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Emma Parker</persName> was
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> maternal aunt. She, her husband
<persName ref="#ParkerWilliam">William Parker</persName>, and their
family lived at <placeName>Lysways Hall</placeName> near <placeName
ref="#Lichfield">Lichfield.</placeName><lb/> Reade, The Mellards &
Their Descendants, 18-20. </note></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="ParkerWilliam" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="BestWilliamThomas" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="DowieAnnie" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="TaylorAlfred" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="MrsAlfred" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="Greg" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="Sophia" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="LovellWilliam" sex="1"/>
<person xml:id="MrsLovellWilliam" sex="2"/>
<!--KF: Change this xml id when we find out her given name-->
<person xml:id="MrsStewartAndrew" sex="2"/>
<!--KF: Change this xml id when we find out her given name-->
<person xml:id="MrWarren" sex="1"/>
<!-- KF: The following stub entries are from UCLADM14 -->
<person xml:id="GibsonMilnerMrs" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Gibson</surname><forename>Milner</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="PearsonLauren" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Pearson</surname><forename>Lauren</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="AdamsWBridges" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Adams</surname><forename>Bridges</forename></persName>
<!--<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah mentions "a squabble at Mr. W. Bridges Adams" in UCLADM14. I have yet to find sources that verify the existence of a relationship, but it seems like she must be referring to the writer and railway engineer, William Bridges Adams. Adams lived in London and was a partner in Hobson & Co. coaches.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissGarden" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Garden</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHartwell" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Hartwell</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissThomson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Thomson</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MissHill" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Hill</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsGow" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Gow</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsGuelph" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Guelph</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Easton" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Easton</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="June" sex="2">
<persName><forename>June</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Phillipe" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Phillipe</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="George" sex="1">
<persName><forename>George</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="William" sex="1">
<persName><forename>William</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrLewis" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Lewis</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Travis" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Travis</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Nicholay" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Nicholay</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsMiers" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Miers</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrMiers" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Miers</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="Hockin" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Hockin</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWistan" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Wistan</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="EstellFanny" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Estell</surname><forename>Fanny</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="HenstrallPenelope" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Henstrall</surname><forename>Penelope</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrZiepel" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Ziepel</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MontgomeryHugh" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Montgomery</surname><forename>Hugh</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="PocockGeorge" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Pocock</surname><forename>George</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MiersJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Miers</surname><forename>John</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrGale" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Gale</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrWatson" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Watson</surname></persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mr. Watson</persName> seems to
have been a business acquaintance of <persName ref="#MulockBen"
>Ben</persName>'s.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrMatthew" sex="1">
<persName><forename>Matthew</forename></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsHowlett" sex="2"/>
<person xml:id="MrClay" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Clay</surname></persName>
</person>
<person xml:id="MrsRivers" sex="2">
<persName><surname type="married">Rivers</surname></persName>
<!-- Mentioned in Berg 20. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissBrimely" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Brimely</surname></persName>
<!-- Mentioned in Berg 20. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</person>
<person xml:id="AllenHarriet" sex="2">
<!--<note resp="AndersonHannah">A visitor of <persName ref="DMC"
>Craik's</persName>in <date when="1860-02">February 1860</date></note>
</person>--></person>
<person xml:id="MrsAleck" sex="2">
<!--<note resp="AndersonHannah">Referenced as a friend of <persName
ref="AllenHarriet">Harriet Allen.</persName></note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MrStirling" sex="1">
<!--<note resp="AndersonHannah">Mentioned in a <date when="1860-02"
>February 1860</date>letter close; sending a "prize-man"?</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Manche" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Manché</surname></persName>
<!--<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Manché</persName> was a writer of children's fairy tales. Presumably French.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MadameDAubrey" sex="2">
<persName><surname>D'Aubrey</surname></persName>
<!--<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Madame D'Aubrey</persName> was a writer of fairy tales. Dinah thought her tales were unsuitable for children.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="NicholJohn" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Nichol</surname><forename>John</forename></persName>
<!--<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><persName>Madame D'Aubrey</persName> was a writer of fairy tales. Dinah thought her tales were unsuitable for children.</note>-->
</person>
<person xml:id="BuchananNora" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Buchanan</surname><forename>Nora</forename></persName>
<!--KF: NLS21 "DMC to Nora [Buchanan], 11 April 1884" is addressed simply to Nora. There is a note in the transcription that
states that this letter was found inside Nora Buchanan's autograph book.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MissSkinner" sex="2">
<persName><surname>Skinner</surname></persName>
<!--HA: mentioned in Harvard10 as "Misses Skinner, possibly referring to multiple people.-->
</person>
<person xml:id="SignorBarbera" sex="1">
<persName><persName><surname>Barbera</surname></persName></persName>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<occupation>Translator</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>Signor Barbera</persName> also
operated as an arbiter between the publishing firm <orgName>Le
Monnier</orgName> and Italian author <persName>Manzoni</persName> over a
copyright conflict in <date when="1864">1864.</date>
<lb/><title>The Literary World</title>, <orgName>James Clarke &
Company</orgName>, <date when="1883">1883.</date></note>
<!--HA: possibly a publisher and translator-->
</person>
<person xml:id="Isabella" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Isabella</forename></persName>
<!--HA: possibly a baby, somehow associated with Philip Marston (King Philip & Isabella of Scotland)-->
</person>
<person xml:id="MalvasiaCarloCesare" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Malvasia</surname><forename>Carlo</forename><forename>Cesare</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1616"/>
<death when="1693"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Italian</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Carlo Cesare
Malvasia</persName> was an Italian writer and art historican whose works
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> read and translated for publication by
<orgName ref="#Chambers">Chambers.</orgName><lb/>
<!--https://dictionaryofarthistorians.org/malvasiac.htm--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Bessy" sex="2">
<persName><forename>Bessy</forename></persName>
<!--HA: possibly a maid of Dinah's -->
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonRobert" sex="1">
<persName><surname>Anderson</surname><forename>Robert</forename></persName>
<birth when="1830"/>
<death when="1901"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mr. Robert Anderson</persName>
was a Scottish publisher who took over the firm <orgName>W. Oliphant &
Sons</orgName> in <date when="1858">1858.</date> The firm became <orgName>W.
Oliphant & Co.</orgName> and then <orgName
ref="#OliphantAndersonFerrier">Oliphant, Anderson, & Ferrier.</orgName>
<persName>Mr. Anderson</persName> seems to have known <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName> and <persName ref="#PatonJosephNoel">Noel Paton</persName>
through his publishing business.<lb/> "Messrs Oliphant, Anderson &
Ferrier." Publishers' Circular and Booksllers' Record of British and Foreign
Literature vol. 54, no. 1304 (27 June 1891): 680-682. Web. <!--Google Books-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonMay" sex="F">
<persName><surname>Anderson</surname><forename>May</forename></persName>
<birth/>
<death/>
<!--HA: <occupation>Mystery</occupation>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah"><persName>May Anderson</persName>is a
mystery who probably lived with <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> and
<persName ref="#LovellMinna"> at <placeName ref="#Lynover">Lynover
Cottage.</placeName></persName></note>-->
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="Organizations">
<head>Organizations</head>
<listOrg>
<!-- Publishers -->
<org xml:id="Bentley" type="publisher">
<orgName notAfter="1829">Bentley & Co</orgName>
<orgName from="1829" to="1832">Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley</orgName>
<orgName from="1832" to="1871">Richard Bentley</orgName>
<orgName from="1871" to="1898">Richard Bentley & Son</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName ref="#BentleyEdward">Edward
Bentley</persName>, his son <persName ref="#BentleyRichard"
>Richard</persName> and his grand-son <persName ref="#BentleyGeorge"
>George</persName> were three generations of publishers based out of
<placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> The name Bentley is best-known
for Richard Bentley's periodical "<title corresp="#BentleysMiscellany"
>Bentley's Miscellany</title>" which was edited by <persName
ref="#DickensCharles">Charles Dickens.</persName><lb/>Anderson, Patricia J.
and Jonathan Rose, eds., "Richard Bentley," <hi rend="italics">British Literary
Publishing Houses, 1820-1880</hi> 106, (Detroit: Gale, 1991), 39-52. DLB
106.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="OrrCo" type="publisher">
<orgName><choice>
<abbr>Wm.</abbr>
<expan>William</expan>
</choice> S. Orr & Co</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Wm. S. Orr & Co was a <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>-based publisher run by <persName
ref="#OrrWilliamSomerville">William Somerville Orr.</persName><lb/>
ODNB.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="TCNewby" type="publisher">
<orgName>T.C. Newby</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">T.C. Newby was a <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName> publishing company run by <persName
ref="#NewbyThomasCautley">Thomas Cautley Newby.</persName><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Chambers" type="publisher">
<orgName>W. & R. Chambers</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Chambers was a publishing company located in
<placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh.</placeName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="CadellCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Cadell & Co</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Cadell & Co was a Scottish publishing company
located in <placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName>.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="DaldyIsbisterCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Daldy Isbister & Co</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Daldy Isbister & Co was a publishing company
located in <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="HallVirtueCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Arthur Hall, Virtue & Co</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Arthus Hall, Virtue & Co was an English
publishing company founded <date notBefore="1847" notAfter="1849">c.
1848</date>.<lb/> Boase, G. C., "Virtue James Sprent (1829-1892)," ODNB.
</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="HodgsonGraves" type="publisher">
<orgName>Hodgson & Graves</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Hodgson & Graves was an English publishing
company located at 6 <placeName ref="#PallMall">Pall Mall</placeName>,
<placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>.<lb/>
</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="ParkerAndSon" type="publisher">
<orgName from="1832" to="1843">John W. Parker</orgName>
<orgName from="1843" to="1848">John W. Parker & Sons</orgName>
<orgName from="1848" to="1860">John W. Parker & Son</orgName>
<orgName from="1860" to="1863">Parker, Son, and Bourn</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">John W. Parker & Son (and all its iterations)
was a publishing company located in central <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName> From <date when="1848">1848,</date> when the firm was
under the direction of <persName ref="#ParkerJohnWilliamJr">the younger
Parker</persName>, the firm became known for embracing liberal and
eventually socialist Christianity.<lb/> ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- KF: the xml:id is named after the firm's most active publishing period -->
</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Bell">
<orgName notAfter="1855">George Bell</orgName>
<orgName from="1855" to="1873">Bell and Daldy</orgName>
<orgName notBefore="1873">George Bell and Sons</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">George Bell, Bell and Daldy, and George Bell and
Sons were all <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> publishing companies
owned or partially owned by <persName ref="#BellGeorge">George
Bell.</persName><lb/> ODNB.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="WilliamsNorgate" type="publisher">
<orgName>Williams & Norgate</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>Williams & Norgate</orgName> were
publishers with offices in <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> and
<placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh.</placeName> They specialized in
scientific literature.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="SampsonLowAndCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Sampson Low, Son and Company</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>Sampson Low, Son and Company</orgName> was
a publishing office originally located on <placeName ref="#FleetStreet">Fleet
Street</placeName>. It was founded by the well-known bookseller <persName
ref="#LowSampson">Sampson Low</persName> and his eldest son in <date
when="1848">1848.</date> ODNB.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="PhillipsSampsonCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Phillips, Sampson and Co.</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>Phillips, Sampson and Co.</orgName> was a
publishing firm based out of <placeName ref="#Boston">Boston.</placeName> They
were the founders and original publishers of <title corresp="#AtlanticMonthly"
>the Atlantic Monthly.</title></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="OliphantAndersonFerrier">
<orgName from="1830" to="1858">W. Oliphant & Sons</orgName>
<orgName from="1858" to="1880">W. Oliphant & Co.</orgName>
<orgName from="1880" to="1915">Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName ref="#OliphantAndersonFerrier">Oliphant,
Anderson, & Ferrier</orgName> was a Scottish publishing company that was
most active in the mid-late nineteenth century. They specialized in domestic
fiction and biographies.<lb/> "Messrs Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier."
Publishers' Circular and Booksllers' Record of British and Foreign Literature
vol. 54, no. 1304 (27 June 1891): 680-682. Web. <!--Google Books-->
</note>
<org xml:id="GriffinCo">
<orgName from="1820" to="1860">Richard Griffin & Co</orgName>
<orgName from="1860" to="1862">Griffin, Bohn & Co</orgName>
<orgName from="1862">Charles Griffin & Co</orgName>
<addName>Griffin & Co</addName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><orgName>Griffin & Co</orgName> was a
<placeName ref="#Glasgow">Glasgow</placeName>-based publishing business
of <persName ref="#GriffinRichard">Richard Griffin,</persName>
<persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GriffinJohn">John Joseph
Griffin</persName> and <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GriffinCharles"
>Charles Griffin.</persName> The company sold an ecletic combination of
chemicals and books. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</org>
</org>
<!-- Families -->
<org xml:id="MacmillanFamily" type="family">
<orgName>The Macmillans</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Macmillans were the family members of <persName
ref="#MacmillanDaniel">Daniel</persName> and <persName
ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander Macmillan</persName>, founders of the
<orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</orgName> publishing house. For a list
of the brothers' respective spouses and children, consult the ODNB entry
"Macmillan Family."</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Craik" type="family">
<orgName>The Craiks</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Craiks were Dinah's husband <persName
ref="#CraikGeorge">George</persName>'s family.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Singleton" type="family">
<orgName>The Singletons</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Singletons were friends of Dinah's while she
lived at <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath</placeName>.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Marston" type="family">
<orgName>The Marstons</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah was very close with the Marston family
throughout the 1850s and beyond. She was godmother to the family's youngest
child, <persName ref="#MarstonPhilipBourke">Philip Bourke
Marston</persName>.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="HolmanHunts" type="family">
<orgName>The Holman-Hunts</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Allingham" type="family">
<orgName>The Allinghams</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Reade" type="family">
<orgName>The Reades</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="MulockAunts" type="family">
<orgName>The Mulock Aunts</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah's paternal aunts Jane, Emily, Eliza, Frances,
Ann, and Eliza Mulock lived at <placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Garden" type="family">
<orgName>The Gardens</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Mudie" type="family">
<orgName>The Mudies</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Ziepel" type="family">
<orgName>The Ziepels</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Stoddar" type="family">
<orgName>The Stoddars</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Estell" type="family">
<orgName>The Estells</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Adams" type="family">
<orgName>The Adams</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Storrar" type="family">
<orgName>The Storrars</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="ChambersFamily" type="family">
<orgName>The Chambers</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Chambers Family</orgName> refers to
Scottish publishers <persName ref="#ChambersWilliam">William</persName> &
<persName ref="#ChambersRobert">Robert Chambers</persName>, their wives, and
their children.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Parker" type="family">
<orgName>The Parkers</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Parkers</orgName> were the family of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s maternal aunt <persName
ref="#ParkerEmma">Emma Parker</persName> and her husband <persName
ref="#ParkerWilliam">William.</persName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="DeMorgan" type="family">
<orgName>The De Morgans</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The De Morgan Family</orgName> includes
<persName ref="#DeMorganAugustus">Professor Augustus De Morgan</persName>,
the spiritualist writer and social activist <persName ref="#DeMorganSophia"
>Sophia De Morgan</persName>, and their seven children.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Tomlinson" type="family">
<orgName>The Tomlinsons</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Tomlinsons</orgName> were family
friends of the <orgName ref="#Mulock">Mulocks.</orgName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Will" type="family">
<orgName>The Wills</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Jameses" type="family">
<orgName>The Jameses</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Jameses</orgName> were the family of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> close friend, <persName
ref="#JamesMarian">Marian James.</persName></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="Ogilvie" type="family">
<orgName>The Ogilvies</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Ogilvies</orgName> were a family that
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben</persName> and <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName> knew in <placeName ref="#Brazil"
>Brazil.</placeName></note>
</org>
<!-- Other types of organizations -->
<org xml:id="StationersCompany" type="guild">
<orgName>The Stationers' Company</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Stationers' Company was a Guild of Stationers in
the city of <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> At its conception, the
Guild was comprised of those who worked in the trade of manuscript books (i.e.
copiers, limners, and booksellers) but came to include printers in the early
sixteenth century. The Stationers' Company owned a building in <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> called <placeName ref="#StationersHall"
>Stationers' Hall.</placeName><lb/>"The Hall & Heritage," <hi
rend="italics">The Stationers' Company</hi>, accessed Aug. 3, 2015.
https://stationers.org/the-hall-heritage.html.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="BenRhydding" type="hospital">
<orgName>Ben Rhydding</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Ben Rhydding was a medical centre near Leeds known
for its physicians' expertise in Hydro-Therapeutics. Dinah sent her brother
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben</persName> to Ben Rhydding after he had a
"nervous dyspeptic attack".<lb/>"Ben Rhydding," <hi rend="italics">Medical
Times and Gazette Advertiser</hi> 3, no. 1124 (June 22, 1872): 181 and
246.<lb/></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="CatharineLodge" type="school">
<orgName>Catharine Lodge School for Young Ladies</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Established in <date when="1851">1851</date>, the
Catharine Lodge School for Young Ladies was a boarding and day school that
prepared middle-class girls to be good governesses and wives.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="MertonCollege" type="school">
<orgName>Merton College</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Established in <date when="1264">1264</date>, Merton
College was one of the first constituent colleges of the <orgName
ref="#UniversityOfOxford">University of Oxford.</orgName><lb/> "The history
of Merton," <hi rend="italics">Merton College: Oxford</hi>, accessed July 14,
2015, http://www.merton.ox.ac.uk/about/history-merton. </note>
</org>
<org xml:id="SaltleyReformatory" type="school">
<orgName>Saltley Reformatory</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Established in <date when="1852">1852</date>, The
Saltley Reformatory was a boy's industrial school located in central <placeName
ref="#Birmingham">Birmingham.</placeName> Its goal was to train juvenile
offenders in the trades so as to mould them into productive members of society
and prevent them from falling into a life of crime. <lb/> ODNB. <lb/>Barnett,
Mary G. "D— The First Reformatory School Acts," <hi rend="italics">Young
Delinquents: A Study of Reformatory and Industrial Schools,</hi> (New York,
E. P. Dutton & Co., 1913): 20-22.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="UniversityOfOxford" type="school">
<orgName>University of Oxford</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The University of Oxford is the oldest university in
the English speaking world. It is said to have been founded in <placeName
ref="#Oxford">Oxford</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England</placeName> the last decade of the eleventh century, <date
notBefore="1090" notAfter="1100">c. 1096.</date><lb/> "Introduction and
History," <hi rend="italics">University of Oxford</hi>, accessed July 14, 2015,
http://www.ox.ac.uk/about/organisation/history.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="UniversityofCambridge">
<orgName>University of Cambridge</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="FischbacherandSandoz" type="publisher">
<orgName>Fischbacher and Sandoz</orgName>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">Fischbacher and Sandoz was a publishing firm in
<placeName ref="#Paris">Paris,</placeName> and also had branch houses in
<placeName ref="#Neuchatel">Neuchatel</placeName> and <placeName
ref="#Geneva">Geneva.</placeName></note>
<!-- Mentioned in letter PU208.Kelsey Jacobi-->
</org>
<org xml:id="BlindAssociation">
<orgName>Association for Promoting the General Welfare of the Blind</orgName>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey"> The Association for Promoting the General Welfare of
the Blind was founded by <persName ref="#GilbertElizabeth">Elizabeth
Gilbert</persName> first as a private undertaking in <date when="1854"
>1854</date> and it grew into an association in <date when="1856"
>1856</date>. Its purpose was to give blind people employment and train them
in industrial occupations.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="BrothersGrimm" type="publisher">
<orgName>Grimm Brothers</orgName>
<note resp="#GivogueStevensonLecia">The Brothers Grimm comprised of brothers
<persName>Jacob</persName> and <persName>Wilhelm Grimm</persName>. During
the 1800s they collected and publsihed folklore tales. The brothers became
well-known storytellers of folk tales and popularized stories such as
<title>"Cinderella"</title>, <title>"The Frog Prince"</title>, and
<title>"Sleeping Beauty"</title>.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="InscriptionsBellesLettres">
<orgName><foreign xml:lang="fr">Académie des Inscriptions et
Belles-Lettres</foreign></orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The <orgName><foreign xml:lang="fr">Académie des
Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres</foreign></orgName> is a French society
for the support and promotion of the humanities. It was founded in <date
when="1663">1663.</date></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="LondonUniversity" type="school">
<orgName>London University</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>London University</orgName> was founded in
<date when="1826">1826</date> as an alternative to <orgName
ref="#OxfordUniversity">Oxford</orgName> and <orgName
ref="#UniversityOfCambridge">Cambridge.</orgName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> brother <persName ref="#MulockBen"
>Ben</persName> studied Mathematics, Latin, and Natural Philosophy at the
<orgName>University of London</orgName> beginning in <date when="1848"
>1848.</date></note>
</org>
<org xml:id="RLF">
<orgName>Royal Literary Fund</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>The Royal Literary Fund</orgName> is an
organized scheme of assistance for writers in financial difficulty. It was
established in the late eighteenth-century and is based in <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName>
<lb/> Bradford A. Booth, "Trollope and the Royal Literary Fund," Nineteenth
Century Fiction 7.3 (December 1952): 208-216, doi: 10.2307/3044361.<lb/> "About
the RLF," Royal Literary Fund, https://www.rlf.org.uk/.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="PhoenixInsurance">
<orgName>Phoenix Insurance Company</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><orgName>Phoenix</orgName> was a major insurance
company based in <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName>
<persName ref="#LovellGeorge">George Lovell</persName> was
<orgName>Phoenix's</orgName> secretary for many years.<lb/> ODNB.</note>
</org>
<org xml:id="JointStockBank">
<orgName>The Joint Stock Bank</orgName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>
<orgName>Joint Stock Bank</orgName> was one of the first joint stock banks in
<placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>, meaning that it was owned by
multiple shareholders instead of by a single private company. It operated <date
from="1836" to="1918">from 1836 to 1918.</date><lb/>
<!--http://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_414005_en.pdf--></note>
</org>
</listOrg>
</div>
<div type="StubEntriesOrganizations">
<!-- The following are all stub entries to be defined/researched and developed -->
<head>Stub Entries Organizations</head>
<listOrg>
<!-- Publishers -->
<org xml:id="AddeyCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Addey & Co</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="CundallAddey" type="publisher">
<orgName>Cundall & Addey</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="SimsMcIntyre" type="publisher">
<orgName>Sims & McIntyre</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Tauchnitz" type="publisher">
<orgName>Tauchnitz</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="BradburyEvans" type="publisher">
<orgName>Bradbury & Evans</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Macmillan" type="publisher">
<orgName>Macmillan</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="HurstBlackett" type="publisher">
<orgName>Hurst and Blackett</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="ChapmanHall" type="publisher">
<orgName>Chapman and Hall</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Harpers" type="publisher">
<orgName>Harper Brothers</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Hachette" type="publisher">
<orgName>Hachette</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="SmithElder" type="publisher">
<orgName>Smith Elder & Co</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="TicknorFields" type="publisher">
<orgName>Ticknor and Fields</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="HoughtonMifflin" type="publisher">
<orgName>Houghton Mifflin</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Blackwoods" type="publisher">
<orgName>Blackwood's</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="StrahanCo" type="publisher">
<orgName>Alexander Strahan & Co</orgName>
</org>
<!-- Families -->
<org xml:id="Dobell" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Paton" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Christy" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Lovell" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Chenery" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Stubbs" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Barrow" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Playne" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Holmes" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Pike" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Alston" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Western" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Pilkington" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Collet" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Harris" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Miers" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Lewin" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Swan" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Walker" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Price" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Davies" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="SpencerBell" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Stewart" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Lubbock" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Tennyson" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Anderson" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Marling" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Bewley" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Lawrence" type="family"/>
<org xml:id="Newell" type="family">
<orgName>Newells</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="Jolly" type="family">
<orgName>Jollys</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="James" type="family"/>
<!-- Other types of organizations -->
<org xml:id="Bancroft">
<orgName>Bancroft School</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="StMarysHospital">
<orgName>St Mary's Hospital</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="RoyalCollegeMusic">
<orgName>The Royal College of Music</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="SpasmodicPoets">
<orgName>Spasmodic Poets</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="PRB">
<orgName>Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="RoyalAcademy">
<orgName>Royal Academy</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="CoventGarden">
<orgName>Covent Garden</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="EastLondonChildrensHospital">
<orgName>East London Children's Hospital</orgName>
</org>
<org xml:id="MissesSkinner"/>
</listOrg>
</div>
<div type="HistoricalPlaces">
<head>Placeography</head>
<listPlace>
<place xml:id="CornerHouse">
<placeName>the Corner House</placeName>
<note>The Corner House was Dinah's most important residence, where she lived <date
from="1869" to="1887">from 1869 until her death</date>. It was built by the
architecht <persName ref="#RichardNormanShaw">Norman Shaw.</persName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="AddisonRoad">
<placeName>84 Addison Road</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">84 Addison Road is an address in <placeName
ref="#Kensington">Kensington</placeName>, <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ArranCottage">
<placeName>Arran Cottage</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Arran Cottage was a holiday home that Dinah Craik
frequented in the <placeName ref="#Arran">Isle of Arran</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bahia">
<placeName>Bahia</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bahia is a state in Eastern <placeName ref="#Brazil"
>Brazil</placeName>. <persName ref="#MulockBen">Benjamin Mulock</persName>
worked as a civil engineer photographing the railway in Bahia <date
notBefore="1859" notAfter="1863">from c. 1860 to c. 1862</date>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BakerStreet">
<placeName>Baker Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Baker Street is a street in central <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>. <persName ref="#ChapmanFrederic">Frederic
Chapman</persName> and his family might have had an address on Baker
Street.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BristoStreet">
<placeName>Bristo Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bristo Street was a street in <placeName
ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName> where Dinah's friend <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MrsLongstaff">Mrs. Longstaff</persName> lived. The
street has since been demolished. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BootlecumLinacre">
<placeName>Bootle-cum-Linacre</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bootle-cum-Linacre (Linacre) was a small hamlet
located near <placeName ref="#Liverpool">Liverpool</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dunblane">
<placeName>Dunblane</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dunblane is a small town in central <placeName
ref="#Scotland">Scotland</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Edinburgh">
<placeName>Edinburgh</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Edinburgh is the capital city of <placeName
ref="#Scotland">Scotland</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="EdenCottage">
<placeName>Eden Cottage</placeName>
<note resp="#ParkerJanice">Eden Cottage on Wickham Road was home to the family of
Francis Miers. Eden Cottage was very short walking distance away from distance
the Corner House.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Farnham">
<placeName>Farnham</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Farnham is a town in <placeName ref="#Surrey"
>Surrey</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="FleetStreet"/>
<place xml:id="GeorgeSquare">
<placeName>33 George Square</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">33 George Square was the address of <orgName
ref="#Paton">the Patons</orgName> in <placeName ref="#Edinburgh"
>Edinburgh</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="HenriettaStreet">
<placeName>23 Henrietta Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>
office of <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co</orgName> publishing was
located at 23 Henrietta Street.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="IsleofWight">
<placeName>Isle of Wight</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Isle of Wight is a small island off the Southern
coast of <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>. In the nineteenth
century it was a popular holiday resort for middle- and upper-class
Victorians.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kensington">
<placeName>Kensington</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Kensington is a district of west-central <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="KentishTown">
<placeName>Kentish Town</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Kentish Town is a district of northwest <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kippenross">
<placeName>Kippenross</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Kippenross is a geographic barony located near
<placeName ref="#Dunblane">Dunblane</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Scotland"
>Scotland</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Lancashire">
<placeName>Lancashire</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Lancashire is a historic county in northwestern
<placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>. In the nineteenth century,
Lancashire was a major industrial centre.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Largo">
<placeName>Seatown of Largo</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Largo is a Scottish fishing village that borders the
Firth of Forth.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Fife">
<placeName>Fife</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Fife is a county of southern <placeName
ref="#Scotland">Scotland</placeName> between the <placeName>Firth of
Tay</placeName> and the <placeName>Firth of Forth.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Liverpool">
<placeName>Liverpool</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Liverpool is a Northwestern English city located in
the historic county of <placeName ref="#Lancashire">Lancashire</placeName>.
Dinah lived in Liverpool with her brother <persName ref="#MulockBen">Ben
Mulock</persName> from <date from="1858" to="1859">1858 to 1859</date>.<lb/>
Alexander, Lynn M., ed, "Dinah Mulock Craik: A Brief Chronology," <hi
rend="italics">John Halifax, Gentleman</hi> (Peterborough ON: Broadview,
2005), 25-27. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="MelvilleTerrace">
<placeName>12 Melville Terrace</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">12 Melville Terrace is an address in <placeName
ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="PallMall">
<placeName>Pall Mall</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Pall Mall is a street in west-central <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>. <orgName ref="#HodgsonGraves">Hodgson
& Graves</orgName> had an office at 6 Pall Mall.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Piccadilly">
<placeName>Piccadilly</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Piccadilly is a road in west-central <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>. <orgName ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and
Hall</orgName> had an office at 193 Piccadilly.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Surrey">
<placeName>Surrey</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Surrey is a county in southeastern <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TempleLodge">
<placeName>The Temple Lodge</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Temple Lodge is a lodging in <placeName
ref="#Hammersmith">Hammersmith</placeName>, <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName> where Dinah visited occasionally.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TorrianoAvenue">
<placeName>Torriano Avenue</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Torriano Avenue is a street in <placeName
ref="#KentishTown">Kentish Town</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="UpperTooting">
<placeName>Upper Tooting <addName>Knapdale</addName></placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Upper Tooting is a district of Southern <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>. <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander"
>Alexander Macmillan</persName> of <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan &
Co</orgName> owned a spacious house in Upper Tooting where he regularly
entertained and lodged friends and authors.<lb/> ODNB.<lb/> "Mr. Alexander
Macmillan," <hi rend="italics">Publishers Circular</hi> 58, no. 1385 (1893):
57.<lb/> Seiler, Robert M. ed., "The House of Macmillan," <hi rend="italics"
>The Beautiful Book: Walter Pater and the House of Macmillan</hi>, (London
UK: Bloomsbury, 2013), 29-35. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Richmond">
<placeName>Richmond</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Richmond was a town in
northwestern <placeName ref="#Surrey">Surrey</placeName>, <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="SudbrookPark">
<placeName>Sudbrook Park</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Sudbrook Park was a hydropathic establishment in
<placeName ref="#Richmond">Richmond</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Surrey"
>Surrey.</placeName>
<persName ref="#LaneEdward">Dr. Edward Wickstead Lane</persName> took ownership
of Sudbrook Park after leaving <placeName ref="#MoorPark">Moor Park</placeName>
in <date when="1860">1860.</date>
<lb/>Frederick Burkhardt et al., eds., <hi rend="italics">The Correspondence of
Charles Darwin</hi> 13 (New York: Cambridge UP, 2002): 417n7, n9.<lb/> Kate
Summerscale, <hi rend="italics">Mrs. Robinson's Disgrace: The Private Diary of
a Victorian Woman,</hi> (New York: Bloomsbury, 2012): 60, 184.<lb/></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="UpperTerraceLodge">
<placeName>Upper Terrace Lodge</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Upper Terrace Lodge was the residence of <persName
ref="#MissJames">Miss James </persName>and <persName ref="#MissCoates">Miss
Coates</persName> in <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath"
>Hampstead.</placeName><lb/> “David Gray’s First Proof-Sheet,” <hi
rend="italics">The Irish Monthly</hi> 15, (1887): 425.<lb/>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Amberley">
<placeName>Amberley</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Amberley was a village in
<placeName ref="#Sussex">Sussex</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName><lb/></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Beckenham">
<placeName>Beckenham</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Beckenham was a parish
near <placeName ref="#Bromley">Bromley</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Kent"
>Kent</placeName>. It was about 16 kilometres south-southeast of <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName><lb/>
<!--"Beckenham," <hi rend="italics">Encyclopaedia Britannica</hi> 1911, accessed July 29, 2015. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page%3AEB1911_-_Volume_03.djvu/627--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bloomsbury">
<placeName>Bloomsbury</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Bloomsbury was a district
of Northwest <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>, just east of
<placeName ref="#CamdenTown">Camden Town.</placeName><lb/>
<!-- "Stanford's Library Map of London And Its Suburbs 1864; Showing All The Proposed Metropolitan Railways and Improvements," <hi rend="italics>MapCo,</hi> accessed July 30, 2015. http://london1864.com/stanford15.htm. --></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BurtonCrescent">
<placeName>Burton Crescent</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Burton Crescent was a street in <placeName
ref="#Bloomsbury">Bloomsbury</placeName>, near <placeName ref="#CamdenTown"
>Camden Town.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dorset">
<placeName>Dorset</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dorset is a county in southwest <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName> that borders the English channel.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="MabledonPlace">
<placeName>Mabledon Place</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Mabledon Place was a street in <placeName
ref="#Bloomsbury">Bloomsbury</placeName>, near <placeName ref="#CamdenTown"
>Camden Town.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="OxfordStreet">
<placeName>Oxford Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Oxford Street is a major street in west <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName>
<!--Edward Weller, "Map
of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed Aug. 2, 2015,
http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="PmalderCottage">
<placeName>Pmalder Cottage</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Pmalder Cottage was a property in <placeName
ref="#Greenock">Greenock</placeName> that belonged to <persName
ref="#PatonAllanPark">Allan Park Paton.</persName> Dinah stayed at Pmalder
Cottage in late <date when="1850">1850.</date>."County Directory of Scotland
(1868)," 278. <!-- http://www.mocavo.ca/The-County-Directory-of-Scotland-1868-Volume-1868/887793/278.<lb/> -->
<!-- Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, "2226. EBB to Allan Park Paton," The Brownings' Correspondence, accessed July 23,
2015. http://www.browningscorrespondence.com/correspondence/2473/.--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="PrincessTheatre">
<placeName>The Princess's Theatre</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Princess's Theatre was <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>'s leading theatre <date from="1850" to="1859">from
1850-1859</date>, under the management of <persName ref="#KeanCharles"
>Charles Kean.</persName> It was located in West London on <placeName
ref="#OxfordStreet">Oxford Street.</placeName><lb/> M. Glen Wilson, "Kean,
Charles John (1811-1868)," ODNB.<lb/>
<!-- Edward
Weller, "Map of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed
Aug. 2, 2015, http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.<lb/>-->
<!--Lloyd, Arthur, "The Royal Princess's Theatre, 73 Oxford street, London," <hi rend="italics">The Music Hall and Theatre History Website,</hi> accessed Aug. 3, 2015, http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/Princess.htm.-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="RochesterRoad">
<placeName>Rochester Road</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName ref="#MarstonWestland">John Westland
Marston</persName> had an address at 22 Rochester Road, <placeName
ref="#CamdenRoadVillas">Camden Road Villas</placeName> around the year <date
when="1850">1850</date>.<lb/></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="RoseCottage">
<placeName>Rose Cottage</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Rose Cottage was a holiday home in <placeName
ref="#Amberley">Amberley</placeName> that belonged to a <persName
ref="#MrGuild">Mr.</persName> and <persName ref="#MrsGuild">Mrs.
Guild.</persName> Dinah stayed with the Guilds in the 1850s.<lb/>
<!-- Some claim she wrote <title corresp="#JohnHalifaxGentleman">John Halifax,
Gentleman.</title> while at Rose Cottage, but we have not found letters to substantiate this.<lb/>
Diana Wall, "People of the Past: Dinah Maria
Craik (née Mulock) (1826-1827)," <hi rend="italics">Stroud District
Council,</hi> accessed Aug. 1, 2015.<lb/>
Howard Beard, "Rose Cottage," <hi rend="italics">Minchinhampton and Amberley Through Time,</hi> (Stroud GLOS: Amberley, 2009): n.p. --></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="SandyfordPlace">
<placeName>Sandyford Place</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">15 Sandyford Place was the residence of <persName
ref="#CraikJames">James</persName> and <persName ref="#CraikMargaret"
>Margaret Craik</persName> in <placeName ref="#Glasgow"
>Glasgow.</placeName><lb/> "General Directory: Craig.-Cramb.," <hi
rend="italics">Post Office Glasgow Directory for 1863, 1864,</hi> (Glasgow:
William McKenzie, 1863), 98. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Wareham">
<placeName>Wareham</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Wareham is a town in <placeName ref="#Dorset"
>Dorset</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England">England</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="WattMonument">
<placeName>Watt Monument</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Watt Monument was a name used
semi-interchangeably with the prestigious <placeName ref="#Greenock"
>Greenock</placeName> Library. It was a large well-funded scientific library
characterized by its memorial statue to James Watt, the library’s first and
principal benefactor.<lb/>"Watt Library," <hi rend="italics">Inverclyde's
History,</hi> accessed July 29, 2015.
http://www.inverclydeheritage.org.uk/watt-library/.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Sussex">
<placeName>Sussex</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Sussex was a county in
the south of <placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> It has since been
divided into East and West Sussex, and is referred to as a historic
county.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ChilchesterLodge">
<placeName>Chilchester Lodge</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah moved to Chilchester Lodge, <placeName
ref="#Beckenham">Beckenham</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Kent"
>Kent</placeName> in <date when="1866">1866</date> with her new husband,
<persName ref="#CraikGeorge">George Craik.</persName><lb/>Alexander, Lynn
M., ed, "Dinah Mulock Craik: A Brief Chronology," <hi rend="italics">John
Halifax, Gentleman</hi> (Peterborough ON: Broadview, 2005), 25-27.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Corrie">
<placeName>Corrie</placeName>
<note resp="#ParkerJanice">Corrie is a village on the <placeName ref="#Arran">Isle
of Arran</placeName> where the Craiks's friends the <orgName ref="#Paton"
>Noel-Paton's</orgName> stayed.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Sannox">
<placeName>Sannox</placeName>
<note resp="#ParkerJanice">Sannox is a village on the <placeName ref="#Arran">Isle
of Arran</placeName> where the Craiks's friends the <orgName ref="#Paton"
>Noel-Paton's</orgName> stayed.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TheGrove">
<placeName>The Grove</placeName>
<note resp="#ParkerJanice">The Grove, Charlton Kings, was one of the homes of the
Craik's good friends, the <orgName ref="#Dobell">Dobells</orgName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Detmore">
<placeName>Detmore</placeName>
<note>Detmore was the residence of the <orgName ref="#Dobell">Dobell
family</orgName>, now a bed and breakfast of the same name. See
http://www.detmorehouse.com/.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="DouneTerrace">
<placeName>Doune Terrace</placeName>
<note resp="#BourrierKaren">1 Doune Terrace was the address of the publisher
<persName ref="#ChambersRobert">Robert Chambers</persName> in <placeName
ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName>'s Georgian New Town. Dinah stayed
with Robert Chambers and his family at this address on more than one
occasion.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Wildwood">
<placeName>Wildwood</placeName>
<note>Wildwood was Dinah's beloved cottage on <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath"
>Hampstead Heath</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="HampsteadHeath">
<placeName>Hampstead Heath</placeName>
<note>Dinah had two residences on Hampstead Heath, <placeName
ref="#UpperTerraceCottage">Upper Terrace Cottage</placeName> and most
importantly, <placeName ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood</placeName>. In the nineteenth
century, Hampstead Heath was much further out than it is today.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="London">
<placeName>London</placeName>
<note resp="#BourrierKaren">Dinah and her family moved to London when she was 14,
in <date when="1840">1840</date>. With the exception of a short residence in
<placeName ref="#WemyssBay">Wemyss Bay</placeName>, Craik lived in London
and its suburbs for the rest of her life.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="UpperTerraceCottage">
<placeName>Upper Terrace Cottage</placeName>
<note>Upper Terrace Cottage was Dinah's brief residence in <placeName
ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath</placeName>, where she and Ben lived
before moving to <placeName ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood
Cottage.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Lynover">
<placeName>Lynover Cottage</placeName>
<note>Dinah lived in Lynover cottage with two other young women, likely May James
and <persName ref="#LovellMinna">Minna Lovell</persName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="WemyssBay">
<placeName>Wemyss Bay</placeName>
<note>Dinah fled to Wemyss Bay after the death of her brother <persName
ref="#MulockBen">Ben</persName> in <date when="1863">1863.</date> It was
here that she rekindled her romance with <persName ref="CraikGeorge">George
Craik.</persName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Arran">
<placeName>The Isle of Arran</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Arran or "the Isle of Arran" is an island off the
western coast of <placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bath">
<placeName>Bath</placeName>
<note>Dinah's Mulock Aunts lived in Bath, and she was married from one of their
houses in Bath. She often went to visit her Mulock aunts in the Spring,
bringing her daughter <persName ref="#CraikDorothy">Dorothy</persName> on more
than one occasion.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="AlderleyEdge">
<placeName>Alderley Edge</placeName>
<note>Alderley Edge was a village in Cheshire, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Tewkesbury">
<placeName>Tewkesbury</placeName>
<note>Tewkesbury was a medieval market town in in Gloucestershire, <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName>, and the basis for Norton Bury in <title
ref="#JohnHalifax">John Halifax, Gentleman</title></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Camberley">
<placeName>Camberley</placeName>
<note>A town in <placeName ref="#Surrey">Surrey</placeName>, <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dover">
<placeName>Dover</placeName>
<note>Dover is a town and major port in <placeName ref="#Kent">Kent</placeName>,
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> Dinah Craik owned a cottage
in Dover.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="HerbertTerrace">
<placeName>9 Herbert Terrace.</placeName>
<note>9 Herbert Terrace was the address of Craik's cottage in <placeName
ref="#Dover">Dover.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Chatham">
<placeName>Chatham</placeName>
<note>Chatham is a town in <placeName ref="#Kent">Kent</placeName>, <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="KingsCross">
<placeName>King's Cross</placeName>
<note>King's Cross is a railway station in <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BedfordPlace">
<placeName>Bedford Place</placeName>
<note><placeName>Bedford Place</placeName> was the location of the the <orgName
ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</orgName> Publishing Firm in <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>, where <persName ref="#CraikGeorge">George
Craik</persName> worked. The street is now known as <placeName>Bedford
Gardens.</placeName><lb/> "Bedford Gardens to Uxbridge Street: The Racks,"
Survey of London vol. 37, Northern Kensington (London County Council, 1973)
77–78, via. British History Online.
<!--http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol37/pp77-86--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Eglinton">
<placeName>Eglinton</placeName>
<note>Eglinton is a village in <placeName>Londonderry</placeName>, northern
<placeName ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Tore">
<placeName>Tore</placeName>
<note>The Pilkington family seat in County <placeName ref="#Westmeath"
>Westmeath</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Tyrrellspass">
<placeName>Tyrrellspass</placeName>
<note>Tyrrellspass is a village in County <placeName ref="#Westmeath"
>Westmeath</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Westmeath">
<placeName>Westmeath</placeName>
<note>Westmeath is a county in <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Brompton">
<placeName>Brompton</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Brompton is a district of west-central <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> located near the South end of the
<placeName>Kensington Gardens.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenStreet">
<placeName>18 Camden Street North</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dinah moved to 18 Camden Street North, <placeName
ref="#CamdenTown">Camden Town</placeName> in <date when="1851-11">November
1851</date>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenTown">
<placeName>Camden Town</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Camden Town is a district of northwest <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ClarevilleCottage">
<placeName>Clareville Cottage</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Clareville Cottage was the dwelling of <persName
ref="#ChapmanEdward">Edward Chapman</persName>'s family. It was located in
<placeName ref="#Brompton">Brompton</placeName>, <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kilburn">
<placeName>Kilburn</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Kilburn is a district of northwest <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Leipzig">
<placeName>Leipzig</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Leipzig was a city
in the <placeName ref="#Prussia"
>Kingdom of Prussia</placeName> and is now part of modern Germany. Leipzig
was the location of the Prussian
publishing house, <orgName ref="#Tauchnitz"
>Tauchnitz.</orgName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Paris">
<placeName>Paris</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Paris is the capital city of <placeName
ref="#France">France.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Prussia">
<placeName from="1701" to="1871">Kingdom of Prussia</placeName>
<placeName from="1871" to="1947">Prussia</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Renfrewshire">
<placeName>Renfrewshire</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Renfrewshire is a historic county in the
west-central Scottish lowlands.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Sutherland">
<placeName>Sutherland</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Sutherland is a county in the Scottish
highlands.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Stafford">
<placeName>Stafford</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Stafford is a county town in <placeName
ref="#Staffordshire">Staffordshire</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Staffordshire">
<placeName>Staffordshire</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Staffordshire is a county in the west English
midlands.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Balaklava">
<placeName>Balaklava</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Balaklava was a city in the Crimean Peninsula.
Balaklava was the site of a major battle during the <rs type="event"
ref="#CrimeanWar">Crimean War</rs> (<date from="1853" to="1856"
>1853-1856</date>). </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Belfast">
<placeName>Belfast</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Belfast is the capital city of Northern <placeName
ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName> In the nineteenth century, before the
partition of Ireland (<date when="1920">1920</date>), Belfast was one of the
country's most populous industrial cities. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Birmingham">
<placeName>Birmingham</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Birmingham is a city in the West Midlands of
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> In the nineteenth century,
Birmingham was an industrial and commercial centre.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BrecknockStreet">
<placeName>26 Brecknock Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">26 Brecknock Street was an address in <placeName
ref="#CamdenNewTown">Camden New Town</placeName>, just off of Camden Street
and crossing the tracks of the North London Railway. Dinah lodged at Brecknock
Street sometime in the <date notBefore="1846" notAfter="1850">late
1840s.</date></note>
<!-- Edward Weller, "Map of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed
Aug. 2, 2015. http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.-->
</place>
<place xml:id="BrecknockCrescent">
<placeName>5 Brecknock Crescent</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">5 Brecknock Crescent was an address in <placeName
ref="#CamdenNewTown">Camden New Town</placeName> slightly northeast of
<placeName ref="#BrecknockStreet">Brecknock Street.</placeName><lb/>
<!-- Edward
Weller, "Map of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed Aug. 2,
2015. http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BrecknockTerrace">
<placeName>Brecknock Terrace</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Brecknock Terrace was a street in <placeName
ref="#CamdenNewTown">Camden New Town.</placeName>
<!-- Edward
Weller, "Map of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed
Aug. 2, 2015. http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenNewTown">
<placeName>Camden New Town</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Camden New Town was a district of <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName> just east of <placeName ref="#CamdenTown"
>Camden Town.</placeName>
<!-- Edward Weller, "Map
of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed Aug. 2, 2015.
http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.<lb/>--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenRoad">
<placeName>Camden Road</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Camden Road was a major road in <placeName
ref="#CamdenTown">Camden Town.</placeName>
<!-- Edward Weller, "Map
of London 1868," <hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed Aug. 2, 2015.
http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.<lb/>-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="MorningtonCrescent">
<placeName>7 Mornington Crescent</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, 7 Mornington Crescent was
an address in <placeName ref="#CamdenTown">Camden Town</placeName> South.
<!-- Edward Weller, "Map of London 1868,"
<hi rend="italics">MapCo</hi> accessed Aug. 2, 2015. http://london1868.com/weller16.htm.<lb/>--></note>
<!-- KB: I think this may have been the Lovell's address, it was near where Margaret Oliphant lived. Check Oliphant's autobiography. -->
</place>
<place xml:id="StationersHall">
<placeName>Stationers' Hall Court</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The nineteenth-century Stationers' Hall was a
building in central <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> owned by
<orgName ref="#StationersCompany">The Stationers' Company</orgName> of
<placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> Stationers' Hall still exists
today.<lb/>"The Hall & Heritage," <hi rend="italics">The Stationers'
Company</hi>, accessed Aug. 3, 2015.
https://stationers.org/the-hall-heritage.html.<lb/> "The Stationers' Hall," <hi
rend="italics">The Stationers' Company</hi>, accessed Aug. 3,
2015.https://stationers.org/the-hall-heritage/the-stationers-hall.html.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Brighton">
<placeName>Brighton</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Brighton is a town on the south coast of <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Fairfield">
<placeName>Fairfield</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Fairfield is a town in the county of <placeName
ref="#Surrey">Surrey</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName> Samuel Carter Hall purchased a country home in
Fairfield in <date when="1849">1849.</date><lb/> ODNB.<lb/> "List of Members,"
<hi rend="italics">Surrey Archaeological Collections</hi> 1, (1858):
43.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Ireland">
<placeName>Ireland</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Ireland was yet to be
partitioned. Ireland formed a part of the <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#UK">United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Oxford">
<placeName>Oxford</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Oxford is a city in Southeast <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Saltley">
<placeName>Saltley</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Saltley is a district of central <placeName
ref="#Birmingham">Birmingham.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Italy">
<placeName>Italy <addName>Kingdom of Sardinia</addName>
<addName>Piedmont-Sardinia</addName>
<addName>Kingdom of Italy</addName></placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Kingdom of Sardinia was an early European state
(c. 1324-1861) and a predecessor to modern <placeName ref="#Italy"
>Italy.</placeName> In <date when="1861">1861</date>, the Kingdom of
Sardinia was unified with the rest of Italy and was thus renamed the Kingdom of
Italy. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Donegal">
<placeName>Donegal</placeName>
<note>Donegal is a town in County Donegal, <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Cushendall">
<placeName>Cushendall</placeName>
<note>Cushendall is a village in County Antrim, northern <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Curran">
<placeName>Curran</placeName>
<note>Curran is a small village in County Londonderry, northern <placeName
ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CorinManor">
<placeName>Corin Manor</placeName>
<note><persName ref="#PatonNoel">Sir Noel Paton</persName> used to stay at Corin
Manor in September.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kilnagarna">
<placeName>Kilnagarna</placeName>
<note>Kilnagarna is a place in <placeName ref="#Ireland">Ireland</placeName> where
the Mulock’s had a residence</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Athlone">
<placeName>Athlone</placeName>
<note>Athlone is a village in <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="LoughEskeCastle">
<placeName>Lough Eske Castle</placeName>
<note>Lough Eske Castle is located in County Donegal in the northwest of
<placeName ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dublin">
<placeName>Dublin</placeName>
<note>In the nineteenth century, Dublin was the capital of <placeName
ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Castletown">
<placeName>Castletown</placeName>
<note>Castletown is a village on the north coast of the Highland in <placeName
ref="#Scotland">Scotland</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ShamrockLodges">
<placeName>Shamrock Lodges Athlone</placeName>
<note>Lodges located in Athlone, County Westmeath, <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="SlieveLeague">
<placeName>Slieve League</placeName>
<note>Slieve League is a mountain located on the coast of County Donegal,
<placeName ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Llanfairfechan">
<placeName>Llanfairfechan</placeName>
<note>Llanfairfechan is a town in the Conwy County Borough of <placeName
ref="#Wales">Wales</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="LochFyne">
<placeName>Loch Fyne</placeName>
<note>Loch Fyne is a sea loch located on the west coast of Argyll and Bute,
<placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Derry">
<placeName>Derry</placeName>
<note>Derry is a city in northern <placeName ref="#Ireland"
>Ireland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="York">
<placeName>York</placeName>
<note>York is a city in North Yorkshire, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName> The Flying Scotsman, the train from King's Cross
Station, <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>, to <placeName
ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh Waverley</placeName>, stopped there for lunch
<date from="1862" to="1888">from 1862 to 1888.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Morvern">
<placeName>Morvern</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Morvern is a peninsula in western <placeName
ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dalmally">
<placeName>Dalmally</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dalmally is a village in <placeName ref="#Scotland"
>Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Greenock">
<placeName>Greenock</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Greenock was a burgh in
the historic county of <placeName ref="#Renfrewshire">Renfrewshire</placeName>.
Dinah sometimes stayed with <persName ref="#PatonAllanPark">Allan Park
Paton</persName> in Greenock.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Winchester">
<placeName>Winchester</placeName>
<note>Winchester is a cathedral town in southern <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Hammersmith">
<placeName>Hammersmith</placeName>
<note>Hammersmith is a district in West <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bristol">
<placeName>Bristol</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bristol is a town in southwest <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName> on the River Avon. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Alexandria">
<placeName>Alexandria</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Alexandria is a major port city in northern
<placeName ref="#Egypt">Egypt.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Teignmouth">
<placeName>Teignmouth</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Teignmouth is a town in south <placeName
ref="#Devon">Devon</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Devon">
<placeName>Devon</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Devon is a county in southwest <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CorfeCastle">
<placeName>Corfe Castle</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The ruins of Corfe Castle are situated in the county
of <placeName ref="#Dorset">Dorset</placeName> in southwest <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName>, near <placeName ref="#Swanage"
>Swanage.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Swanage">
<placeName>Swanage</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Swanage is a coastal town in southwest <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Geneva">
<placeName>Geneva</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Geneva is a city in western <placeName
ref="#Switzerland">Switzerland</placeName>. At the beginning of the
nineteenth century Geneva was occupied by <placeName ref="#France"
>France</placeName> but at the end of the Napoleonic Wars (<date when="1815"
>1815</date>) it became part of the Swiss Confederation.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Switzerland">
<placeName>Switzerland <addName>Swiss Confederation</addName></placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Switzerland (formerly the Swiss Confederation) began
the nineteenth century as a as a territory of Napoleonic <placeName
ref="#France">France.</placeName> It went through a period of
Restoration/Reformation after the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and ended the
century as an independent nation-state following the drafting of a formal
Constitution in <date when="1848">1848.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Nice">
<placeName>Nice</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Nice is a city in the south of <placeName
ref="#France">France.</placeName>
<date from="1814" to="1843">From 1814 to 1843</date> Nice was part of the
<placeName ref="#Italy">Kingdom of Sardinia. It was reannexed by <placeName
ref="#France">France</placeName> in <date when="1860"
>1860.</date></placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dieppe">
<placeName>Dieppe</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Dieppe is a coastal town in northern <placeName
ref="#France">France.</placeName> Because of its position on the England
channel, Dieppe was (and still is) a major port town and was important to the
exchange of goods and people in the nineteenth century.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Leamington">
<placeName>Leamington</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Leamington was a spa town
in central <placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Plymouth">
<placeName>Plymouth</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Plymouth is a city on the southwest coast of
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> In the nineteenth century,
Plymouth was a major port city. It was a site for the import and export of
goods as well as the departure point for many naval expeditions. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="NewSydney">
<placeName>New Sydney</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, "New Sydney" was the name
attributed to the city that is now Sydney, <placeName ref="#Australia"
>Australia.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Finnart">
<placeName>Finnart</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The lands of Finnart once formed a barony to the
west of <placeName ref="#Greenock">Greenock</placeName>. By the nineteenth
century, they had been dissolved and divided between <placeName ref="#Gourock"
>Gourock</placeName> and west Greenock.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Gourock">
<placeName>Gourock</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Gourock was a small burgh
in the county of <placeName ref="#Renfrewshire">Renfrewshire,</placeName> just
west of <placeName ref="#Greenock">Greenock.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Longsight">
<placeName>Longsight</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Longsight was a chapelry
near <placeName ref="#Manchester">Manchester.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Manchester">
<placeName>Manchester</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Manchester is a city in northwest <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName> In the nineteenth century, it was a
major industrial center.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Cheltenham">
<placeName>Cheltenham</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Cheltenham is a spa town in western <placeName
ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CharltonKings">
<placeName>Charlton Kings</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Charlton Kings is a suburb of <placeName
ref="#Cheltenham">Cheltenham.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="DetmoreHouse">
<placeName>Detmore House</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Detmore House, <placeName ref="#CharltonKings"
>Charlton Kings</placeName>, was the family home of the <orgName
ref="#Dobell">Dobells.</orgName><lb/> "Directory of the Principal Gentry in
the County of Gloucester," <hi rend="italics">The Cheltenham Annuaire for
1875</hi> (Cheltenham, Henry Davies, 1875), 80.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=f-UNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA80&dq=cheltenham+detmore+house&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiDwMDUlt_MAhVpxYMKHYGrDn0Q6AEILjAA#v=onepage&q=cheltenham%20detmore%20house&f=false --></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Chelsea">
<placeName>Chelsea</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Chelsea is a district of southwest <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName> In the nineteenth century, it had a
reputation as London's bohemian quarter.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TiteStreet">
<placeName>Tite Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">16 Tite Street was the home of <persName
ref="#WildeOscar">Oscar Wilde </persName>in <placeName ref="#Chelsea"
>Chelsea,</placeName>
<placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> Since Wilde's time, the house has
been renumbered to 34 Tite Street.<lb/> E.H. Mikail, ed., <hi rend="italics"
>Oscar Wilde: Interviews and Recollections</hi> 2 (London: Macmillan,
1979).<lb/> John Freeman, <hi rend="italics">Literature and Locality: The
Literary Topography of Britain and Ireland</hi> (London: Casell, 1963),
43.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Cromarty">
<placeName>Cromarty</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, Cromarty was a county
town and seaport in the Scottish Highlands. It was a well-established port for
emigrants. <lb/> Lucille H. Campey, Fast Sailing and Copper-Bottomed: Aberdeen
Sailing Ships and the Emigrant Scots They Carried to Canada, 1774-1855
(Toronto: Natural Heritage/Natural History Inc., 2002), 57–58.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="OrkneyIsles">
<placeName>Orkney Isles</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Orkney is an archipelago off the northeastern coast
of <placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Ramsgate">
<placeName>Ramsgate</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Ramsgate is a seaside town in east
<placeName>Kent</placeName>, <placeName>England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Leckhampton">
<placeName>Leckhampton</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Leckhampton is a district of south <placeName
ref="#Cheltenham">Cheltenham.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Melbourne">
<placeName>Melbourne</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Melbourne is a city in southeastern <placeName
ref="#Australia">Australia.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="StAndrews">
<placeName>St. Andrews</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">St. Andrews was once a royal burgh in eastern
<placeName ref="#Fife">Fife,</placeName>
<placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Cambridge">
<placeName>Cambridge</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Cambridge is a university city in southeastern
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="HammersmithBridge">
<placeName>Hammersmith Bridge</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Hammersmith Bridge crosses the <placeName
ref="#RiverThames">River Thames</placeName> in west <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="RiverThames">
<placeName>The River Thames <addName>The Thames</addName></placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The River Thames flows through southern <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName> and is well-known for crossing through
the capital, <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Niton">
<placeName>Niton</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Niton is a small village on the <placeName
ref="#IsleOfWight">Isle of Wight</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Wapping">
<placeName>Wapping</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Wapping is a district of east <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Netherlands">
<placeName>The Netherlands</placeName>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">The Netherlands is a country in northwestern
Europe.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Neuchatel">
<placeName>Neuchâtel</placeName>
<note resp="#GivogueStevensonLecia"> Neuchâtel is a French-speaking city in
Switzerland. It lies on the northern shore of Lake Neuchâtel. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Armitage">
<placeName>Armitage</placeName>
<note resp="#GivogueStevensonLecia">Armitage is a small village in <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Staffordshire">Staffordshire.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kingsley">
<placeName>Kingsley</placeName>
<note resp="#GivogueStevensonLecia">Kingsley is a small village in <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Staffordshire">Staffordshire.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Strand">
<placeName>The Strand</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Strand is a major street in west-central
London.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="StJohnsWilderness">
<placeName>St. John's Wilderness</placeName>
<placeName>The Backs</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>St. John's Wilderness</placeName>, more
commonly known as the Backs, is a scenic area in the city of <placeName
ref="#Cambridge">Cambridge.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TrinityAvenue">
<placeName>Trinity Avenue</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Trinity Avenue</placeName> is in the city
of <placeName ref="#Cambridge">Cambridge.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Oban">
<placeName>Oban</placeName>
<note resp="#ParkerJanice">Oban is a town in the Argyll and Bute area of Scotland
where Dinah would often go for a holiday.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CollinsFarm">
<placeName>Collin's Farm</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Collin's Farm</placeName> or the Wylde's
Farmhouse was a fashionable farmhouse resort located near <placeName
ref="#Wildwood">Wildwood</placeName> and <placeName ref="#Hampstead"
>Hampstead Heath.</placeName>
<persName ref="#DickensCharles">Charles Dickens</persName> stayed at
<placeName>Collin's Farm</placeName> around <date when="1837-05">May
1837.</date> Norman Page, ed. <title>Charles Dickens: Family
History</title>, volume 5 (New York: Routledge, 1999), 1837, Web. <!--https://books.google.ca/books?id=xf2QqVI19b8C&pg=PA111&lpg=PA111&dq=Dickens+Collin%27s+Farm&source=bl&ots=0a1ZN9RNQ9&sig=QRdT7K0P_RIus72ODjC9J7fl8-0&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiWiYv9uO3SAhVCMGMKHX5lCysQ6AEIMTAE#v=onepage&q=Dickens%20Collin's%20Farm&f=false-->
<!--https://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/things-to-do/green-spaces/hampstead-heath/heritage/Pages/the-wyldes-farmhouse.aspx--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Ayr">
<placeName>Ayr</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Ayr</placeName> is a town and former
Royal Burgh on the southwest coast of <placeName ref="#Scotland"
>Scotland</placeName>. It is near the <placeName ref="#Arran">Isle of Arran,
where <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> had a holiday
home.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TrinityStreet">
<placeName>Trinity Street</placeName>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey"><orgName ref="MacmillanCo">Macmillan Co.</orgName> was
located in Trinity Street in <placeName ref="Cambridge">Cambridge</placeName>
from <date when="1844">1844</date> to <date when="1863">1863.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="LakesDistrict">
<placeName>The Lakes District</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>The Lakes District</placeName> is a region
of northwest <placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> It was a popular
holiday destination in the nineteenth century and featured prominently in the
poems by <persName>William Wordsworth</persName> and other <orgName>Lake
Poets.</orgName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Rydal">
<placeName>Rydal</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Rydal</persName> is a village northeast of
<placeName ref="#Ambleside">Ambleside</placeName> in the <placeName
ref="#LakesDistrict">Lakes District.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Ambleside">
<placeName>Ambleside</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Ambleside</placeName> is a town in the
<placeName ref="#LakesDistrict">Lakes District</placeName> of northwest
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenParkRoad">
<placeName>1 Camden Park Road</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>1 Camden Park Road</placeName>,
<placeName ref="#CamdenParkVillas">Camden Park Villas</placeName> was the
address of <persName ref="#MarstonWestland">John Westland Marston</persName> in
<placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenParkVillas">
<placeName>Camden Park Villas</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Whitby">
<placeName>Whitby</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Whitby</placeName> is a seaside town in
<placeName>Yorkshire,</placeName> northern <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="NorfolkBuildings">
<placeName>15 Norfolk Buildings</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>15 Norfolk Buildings</placeName> was the
address of <orgName ref="#MulockAunts">Dinah's aunts</orgName> in west-central
<placeName ref="#Bath">Bath.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="GreatMarlboroughStreet">
<placeName>13 Great Marlborough Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>13 Great Marlborough Street</placeName>
was the office of the publishers <orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</orgName> in west <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Geelong">
<placeName>Geelong</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Geelong</placeName> is a port city in
southern <placeName ref="#Australia">Australia.</placeName> The city
experienced a boom period during the Victorian gold rush of the <date
from="1850" to="1859">1850s.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bayswater">
<placeName>Bayswater</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Bayswater</placeName> is a residential
area in west-central <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> close to the
<placeName>Kensington Gardens.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BayswaterRoad">
<placeName>Bayswater Road</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName ref="#OliphantMargaret">Margaret
Oliphant</placeName> and her family lived on <placeName>Bayswater
Road</placeName> for a short time in <date when="1865">1865</date> while
they looked for a home to rent in <placeName>Windsor.</placeName>
<!--KF: Moved to 6 Clarence Crescent in Nov. 1865 Windsor-->
<lb/> Margaret Oliphant, "Margaret Oliphant: A Brief Chronology," Autobiography
of Margaret Oliphant, ed. Elisabeth Jay (Broadview P, 2002), 169.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BeckenhamChurch">
<placeName>Beckenham Church</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Beckenham Church</placeName> was the main
Anglican parish church in <placeName ref="#Beckenham">Beckenham</placeName>,
<placeName ref="#Kent">Kent.</placeName> It is also known as <placeName>St.
George's Church.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Birkenhead">
<placeName>Birkenhead</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Birkenhead</placeName> is a town in
<placeName>Merseyside</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England</placeName>, across the river from <placeName ref="#Liverpool"
>Liverpool.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Claughton">
<placeName>Claughton</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Claughton</placeName> is a residential
district in <placeName ref="#Birkenhead">Birkenhead.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BathStreet">
<placeName>Bath Street</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>13 Bath Street</placeName>, <placeName
ref="Claughton">Claughton</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Birkenhead"
>Birkenhead</placeName> was one of <persName ref="#OliphantMargaret"
>Margaret Oliphant</persName>'s many addresses near <placeName
ref="#Liverpool">Liverpool.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="KensingtonStation">
<placeName>Kensington Station</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, <placeName>Kensington
Station</placeName> was a major railway station in west-central <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BalhamStation">
<placeName>Balham Station</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century, <placeName>Balham
Station</placeName> was a railway station in south <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ClaphamJunction">
<placeName>Clapham Junction Station</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Clapham Junction Station</placeName> is a
major railway station in <placeName>Battlesea,</placeName> southwest <placeName
ref="#London">London</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Chalcots">
<placeName>Chalcots</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Chalcots</placeName> was a sub-division
of <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath,</placeName> – once called
the Chalcots estate. The estate was developed for mass residency in the early
nineteenth century and became home to families such as the <orgName
ref="#DeMorgan">De Morgans.</orgName><lb/> T F T Baker, Diane K Bolton and
Patricia E C Croot. "Hampstead: Chalcots," in A History of the County of
Middlesex: Volume 9, Hampstead, Paddington, ed. C R Elrington (London: Victoria
County History, 1989), 63-66. British History Online, accessed May 5, 2017,
Web. <!--http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol9/pp63-66.--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Avignon">
<placeName>Avignon</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Avignon</placeName> is a city in
southeastern <placeName ref="#France">France.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BartonUnderNeedwood">
<placeName>Barton-under-Needwood</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Barton-under-Needwood</placeName> is a
village near <placeName ref="#Lichfield">Lichfield</placeName> in <placeName
ref="#Staffordshire">Staffordshire</placeName>, <placeName ref="#England"
>England.</placeName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> family friend <persName
ref="#MrsWilson">Mrs Wilson</persName> lived in
<placeName>Barton-under-Needwood</placeName> in <date when="1845"
>1845.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Lichfield">
<placeName>Lichfield</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Lichfield</placeName> is a city in
<placeName ref="#Staffordshire">Staffordshire,</placeName>
<placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName> In the <date when="1845"
precision="medium">mid-1840s,</date>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> maternal aunt, <persName
ref="#ParkerEmma">Emma Mellard Parker</persName>, and her family lived at
<placeName>Lysways Hall</placeName> near
<placeName>Lichfield.</placeName><lb/> Reade, The Mellards & Their
Descendants, 18-20.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Willesden">
<placeName>Willesden</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth-century,
<placeName>Willesden</placeName> was a parish in <placeName ref="#Middlesex"
>Middlesex,</placeName> near <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Urquhart">
<placeName>Urquhart</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Urquhart</placeName> could refer to any of
four areas in <placeName ref="#Scotland">Scotland,</placeName> one of which is
in <placeName ref="#Fife">Fife.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Cornwall">
<placeName>Cornwall</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Cornwall</placeName> is a ceremonial
county on the westernmost point of the southwest penninsula of <placeName
ref="#England">the United Kingdom.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Ventnor">
<placeName>Ventnor</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Ventnor</placeName>, on <placeName
ref="IsleofWight"> the Isle of Wight</placeName>, is a seaside resort and
parish.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Shanklin">
<placeName>Shanklin</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Shanklin</placeName> is where <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#ParrHarriet">Holme Lee</persName> lived on
<placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#IsleofWight">the Isle of
Wight.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Southampton">
<placeName>Southampton</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Southampton</placeName> is a city
south-west of <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> on the south coast of
<placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bradford">
<placeName>Bradford</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Bradford</placeName> is a city in
<placeName>West Yorkshire,</placeName>
<placeName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#England">England</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Oldfield">
<placeName>Oldfield</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Oldfield</placeName> is a small hamlet in
<placeName>West Yorkshire</placeName>, <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#England">England</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Aldworth">
<placeName>Aldworth</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Aldworth</placeName> was <persName
ref="#TennysonAlfred">Lord Tennyson's</persName> house in
<placeName>Blackdown</placeName>, <placeName ref="#Sussex">West
Sussex.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Farringford">
<placeName>Farringford House</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Farringford House</placeName> was
<persName ref="#TennysonAlfred">Lord Alfred Tennyson's</persName> main
residence, located on <placeName ref="#IsleofWight">the Isle of
Wight.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Freshwater">
<placeName>Freshwater</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>Freshwater</placeName> is a large village
and parish on the western end of <placeName ref="#IsleofWight">the Isle of
Wight</placeName>, and was popularised as a coastal resort town in the
Victorian era.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="VictoriaStationLondon">
<placeName>London Victoria Station</placeName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><placeName>London Victoria Station</placeName> is a
central <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> Underground and train
station which operates trains to <placeName ref="#Kent"
>Kent</placeName>.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="ClockHouse">
<placeName>The Clock House</placeName>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey"><placeName>The Clock House</placeName> was the
address of <persName ref="#MissMontgomery">Miss Montgomery</persName> in
<placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath">Hampstead Heath.</placeName>
<persName ref="#HerfordLaura">Laura Herford</persName> lived here while
attending the <orgName ref="#RoyalAcademy">Royal
Academy.</orgName><lb/><!--Ancestry--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="StPaulsCathedral">
<placeName>St. Paul's Cathedral</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>St. Paul's Cathedral</placeName> is an
Anglican cathedral in east-central <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName>
It is one of the city's major landmarks.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="WatlingStreet">
<placeName>Watling Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Watling Street</placeName> is a major
ancient road that, in the nineteenth century, ran from <placeName ref="#Dover"
>Dover</placeName> to <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>. The
<orgName>London Fire Brigade</orgName> (formerly <orgName>the London Fire
Engine Establishment</orgName>) used to be located on <placeName>68 Watling
Street.</placeName><lb/> H. Waddington, "Copy of the Letter from the
Secretary of the London Fire Brigade, dated the 21st day of February 1862,
addressed to the Secretary of State for the Home Department," Accounts and
Papers of the House of Commons vol. XLVII (1862): 243. <!-- KF: This source is available on Google Books -->
<!--"On Watling Street," Caroline Shenton: Archivist, Historian and Writer, Dec. 30, 2012, http://www.carolineshenton.co.uk/on-watling-street/-->
<!--"Brigade marks 150th anniversary with Cathedral thanksgiving," London Fire Brigade, News Releases 2016, July 4, 2016, http://www.london-fire.gov.uk/news/LatestNewsReleases_Brigademarks150thanniversarywithCathedralthanksgiving.asp#.WQANvlPyuHo--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="LondonBridgeStation">
<placeName>London Bridge Station</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>London Bridge Station</placeName> is a
major railway station located in south-central <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName> on <placeName ref="#TooleyStreet">Tooley
Street.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="EatonSquare">
<placeName>Eaton Square</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Eaton Square</placeName> is a garden
square in west <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> Since the
nineteenth century, <placeName>Eaton Square</placeName> has been primarily a
residential area for the upper classes.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Leicester">
<placeName>Leicester</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Leicester</placeName> is a city in
east-central <placeName ref="#England">England.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bruges">
<placeName>Bruges</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Bruges</placeName> is the capital city of
<placeName ref="#Belgium">Belgium.</placeName> In the latter half of the
nineteenth century, <placeName>Bruges</placeName> was a popular tourist
destination for the British upper classes.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="TooleyStreet">
<placeName>Tooley Street</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Tooley Street</placeName> was a riverside
street in south-central <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> A
warehouse on <placeName>Cotton's Wharf</placeName>, <placeName>Tooley
Street</placeName> was the ignition site of the <rs type="event"
ref="#TooleyStreetFire">Tooley Street Fire</rs> of <date when="1861"
>1861.</date><lb/> "The Great Fire," Times (London), June 25, 1861, pg. 9;
Issue 23968.</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bombay">
<placeName>Bombay</placeName>
<placeName>Mumbai</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In the nineteenth century,
<placeName>Bombay</placeName> (now <placeName>Mumbai</placeName>) was a
major trading city in <placeName ref="#India">India.</placeName><lb/>
Chakravarthi Raghavan, "Mumbai, India," Encyclopaedia Britannica, Web.
<!--https://www.britannica.com/place/Mumbai-->
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Bermondsey">
<placeName>Bermondsey</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Bermondsey</placeName> is a district of
southeast <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>, bordering the <placeName
ref="#RiverThames">Thames.</placeName>
</note>
</place>
<place xml:id="LordWarden">
<placeName>Lord Warden House</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>The Lord Warden House</placeName> is a
luxury hotel that opened in <placeName ref="#Dover">Dover</placeName> in <date
when="1853">1853.</date> It waas named after the then <persName>Duke of
Wellington</persName>, who was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.<lb/>
<!--https://doverhistorian.com/2013/10/02/lord-warden-hotel-house/--></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="BrackleyVillas">
<placeName>Brackley Villas</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Brackley Villas</placeName>, <placeName
ref="#Dulwich">Dulwich</placeName> was the address of the famous English
singer <persName ref="#CummingsWilliamHayman">W. H. Cummings</persName> in
<date when="1876">1876.</date></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dulwich">
<placeName>Dulwich</placeName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>Dulwich</placeName> is an area of
southeast <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName> in
<placeName>Southwark.</placeName></note>
</place>
</listPlace>
</div>
<div type="StubEntriesPlaces">
<!-- The following are all stub entries to be defined/researched and developed -->
<head>Stub Entries Places</head>
<listPlace>
<place xml:id="Brazil"/>
<place xml:id="England"/>
<place xml:id="France"/>
<place xml:id="Scotland"/>
<place xml:id="Australia"/>
<place xml:id="USA">
<placeName>The United States of America</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Egypt"/>
<place xml:id="UK">
<placeName from="1801" to="1922">The United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland</placeName>
<placeName from="1922">The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Wales">
<placeName>Wales</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="CamdenRoadVillas"/>
<place xml:id="Waterloo"/>
<place xml:id="MoorPark"/>
<place xml:id="StokeUponTrent">
<placeName>Stoke-upon-Trent</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="NewYork">
<placeName>New York City</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Shortlands">
<placeName>Shortlands</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kent">
<placeName>Kent</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Kilbourne">
<placeName>Kilbourne</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Glasgow">
<placeName>Glasgow</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Salton">
<placeName>Salton</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Gloucester">
<placeName>Gloucester</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Dorsetshire">
<placeName>Dorsetshire</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Anbrion">
<placeName>Anbrion</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Lurne">
<placeName>Lurne</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Carlisle">
<placeName>Carlisle</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Mulingham">
<placeName>Mulingham</placeName>
<!-- KF: Entry needs to be verified. One of us wrote, "Mulingham is a village close to Castletown?" -->
</place>
<place xml:id="CrystalPalace">
<placeName>The Crystal Palace</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Rome">
<placeName>Rome</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="BelgraveTerrace">
<placeName>Belgrave Terrace</placeName>
<!--UCLA10.1-->
</place>
<place xml:id="Clarendon">
<placeName>Clarendon</placeName>
<!--UCLA10.15-->
</place>
<place xml:id="HughHouse">
<placeName>Hugh House</placeName>
<!--UCLA10.16-->
</place>
<place xml:id="Grantham">
<!-- Dorothy04 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="StJohnsHouse">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Adrishaig">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Crinan">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="TontineHotel">
<!-- Dorothy05 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="SannoxHouse">
<!-- Dorothy06 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Duddington">
<!-- Dorothy07 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="CausewayHotel">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Aberforth">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="CorrieManse">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Larne">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="CushendallHotel">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Bushmills">
<!-- Dorothy09 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Hunnen">
<!-- Dorothy12 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Mullingar">
<!-- Dorothy12 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="ShamrockLodge">
<!-- Dorothy12 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Palermo">
<!-- Dorothy13 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Rothesay">
<!-- Dorothy14, 16 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Sutton">
<!-- Dorothy15 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="GreenhillTerrace">
<!-- Dorothy15, 16 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Ivanhoe">
<!-- Dorothy16 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Duddingston">
<!-- Dorothy16 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: There is a Duddington in England and a Duddingston in Scotland. Check context of Dorothy07 & 16 to see if she is referring to one or both. -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Stranraer">
<!-- Dorothy18 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Andoversford">
<!-- Dorothy18 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Whithington">
<!-- Dorothy18 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Paddington">
<!-- Dorothy18, 21, 22 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Bromley">
<!-- Dorothy18, 33 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Peterborough">
<!-- Dorothy19, 27 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="CorrieHouse">
<!-- Dorothy19 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Gorringes">
<placeName>Gorringe's</placeName>
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
<!-- KF: Gorringe's was a store. Dinah mentions getting a dress at Gorringe's. -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Gravesend">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Bedford">
<!-- Dorothy21 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Holborn">
<!-- Dorothy22 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="EsplenadeHotel">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Chislehurst">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Knockholt">
<!-- Dorothy24 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="FawePark">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Keswick">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="KeswickStreet">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="India">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Shiskine">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="HexhamHydro">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="DerwentWater">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Holyhead">
<!-- Dorothy26 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Wellingham">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Cromer">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Lincoln">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Durham">
<!-- Dorothy27 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Killarney">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="LadyKenmaresCottage">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Muckross">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="TorcWaterfall">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Innisfallen">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Keston">
<!-- Dorothy30 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="WinchesterCollegeChapel">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="Deanery">
<!-- Dorothy32 UCLA -->
</place>
<place xml:id="WinchesterDeanery"/>
<place xml:id="HubertTerrace"/>
<place xml:id="DoverPriory"/>
<place xml:id="Alderney"/>
<place xml:id="ChannelIslands"/>
<!--KF: The following 6 stub entries are from UCLADM25-->
<place xml:id="Longfield"/>
<place xml:id="Aberystwyth"/>
<place xml:id="NewBrighton"/>
<place xml:id="StGeorgesHall"/>
<place xml:id="Walton"/>
<place xml:id="Sydney"/>
<!--KF: Not sure if this is meant to be Sydney, Australia or another Sydney. To double-check.-->
<!--KF: The following 2 stub entries are from UCLATM01 -->
<place xml:id="Newcastle"/>
<place xml:id="Quebec"/>
<!-- KF: The following 4 stub entries are from UCLADM14 -->
<place xml:id="JohannesRiver">
<placeName>Johannes River</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="ValeLodge">
<placeName>Vale Lodge</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="HaltonGarden">
<placeName>Halton Garden</placeName>
<!--KF: This seems to be the address of Orrinsmith and his mother-->
</place>
<place xml:id="WendCottage">
<placeName>Wend Cottage</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="GothicCottage">
<placeName>Gothic Cottage</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="LombardStreet">
<placeName>Lombard Street</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="RegentStreet">
<placeName>Regent Street</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="ParliamentStreet">
<placeName>Parliament Street</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="ClarkHouse">
<placeName>Clark House</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="LudgateHill">
<placeName>Ludgate Hill</placeName>
<note>Ludgate Hill is located in the city of <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="HollandPlace">
<placeName>Holland</placeName>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">Holland is a region and former province on the western
coast of the <placeName ref="#Netherlands">Netherlands, and is also used to
refer to the Netherlands in general.</placeName></note>
</place>
<place xml:id="WoodlandsTerrace">
<placeName>Woodlands Terrace, Glasgow</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Syria">
<placeName>Syria</placeName>
<note>Syria is a country in the Middle East. </note>
</place>
<place xml:id="Crimea">
<placeName>Crimea</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Boston">
<placeName>Boston</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Middlesex">
<placeName>Middlesex</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Chesterfield">
<placeName>Chesterfield</placeName>
</place>
<place xml:id="Mapelle">
<placeName>Mapelle</placeName>
</place>
</listPlace>
</div>
<div type="Events">
<!-- This list is for historical dates and/or events mentioned in Dinah's letters -->
<listEvent>
<event xml:id="EngCivilWar" type="war" from="1642" to="1651">
<label>English Civil War</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="CivilWar" type="war" from="1861" to="1865">
<label>American Civil War</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="Easter">
<label>Easter</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="Christmas">
<label>Christmas</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="CrimeanWar" type="war" from="1853" to="1856">
<label>Crimean War</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="GreatExhibition" when="1851">
<label>Great Exhibition</label>
</event>
<event xml:id="TooleyStreetFire">
<label>The Tooley Street Fire</label>
<label>The Great Fire of Tooley Street</label>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><label>The Tooley Street Fire</label> of <date
when="1861-06-22">22 June 1861</date> was a devastating fire that started on
<placeName ref="#TooleyStreet">Tooley Street</placeName>, <placeName
ref="#London">London.</placeName> The fire caused more than <measure
type="currency">£2 million</measure> in damages and claimed the life of
<persName ref="#BraidwoodJames">James Braidwood,</persName> the
superintendent of the London Fire Engine Establishement. Many claimed that the
<label>Tooley Street Fire</label> was the worst <placeName ref="#London"
>London</placeName> fire since the <label>Great Fire of London</label> in
<date when="1666">1666.</date><lb/> "The Great Fire," Times (London),
Tuesday, June 25, 1861, pg. 9; Issue 23968.</note>
</event>
<event xml:id="GreatFire">
<label>The Great Fire of London</label>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><label>The Great Fire</label> of <date when="1666"
>1666</date> burned down the majority of central <placeName ref="#London"
>London.</placeName> It started shortly after midnight at a bakery on
<placeName>Pudding Lane.</placeName></note>
</event>
</listEvent>
</div>
<div type="Repositories">
<!-- This list is for the repositories holding Craik's correspondence and diares -->
<!-- KF: As of March 2017, we have worked extensively with the Craik letters from the following 4 repositories. In the future we need to add all repositories from the Letters spreadsheet to this list. -->
<head>Repositories</head>
<listBibl>
<bibl>
<msIdentifier xml:id="UCLA">
<country>USA</country>
<region>California</region>
<settlement>Los Angeles</settlement>
<repository>Charles E Young Research Library, University of California at Los
Angeles</repository>
<collection>Mulock Family Papers</collection>
<idno>846</idno>
</msIdentifier></bibl>
<bibl>
<msIdentifier xml:id="Princeton">
<country>USA</country>
<region>New Jersey</region>
<settlement>Princeton</settlement>
<repository>Manuscripts Division, Department of Rare Books and Special
Collections, Princeton University Library</repository>
<collection>M. L. Parrish Collection of Victorian Novelists</collection>
<idno>C0171</idno>
</msIdentifier></bibl>
<bibl>
<msIdentifier xml:id="PierpontMorgan">
<country>USA</country>
<region>New York</region>
<settlement>New York</settlement>
<repository>Literary and Historical Manuscripts, The Morgan Library and
Museum.</repository>
<collection>Dinah Maria Craik Letters</collection>
<idno>MA8610</idno>
</msIdentifier>
</bibl>
<bibl>
<msIdentifier xml:id="NYPLBerg">
<country>USA</country>
<region>New York</region>
<settlement>New York</settlement>
<repository>Berg Collection, New York Public Library</repository>
<collection>Dinah Maria Mulock Craik Collection of Papers</collection>
<idno>Folder 67B2875</idno>
</msIdentifier>
</bibl>
</listBibl>
</div>
<div type="Periodicals">
<!-- This list is for periodicals and magazines -->
<listBibl>
<bibl xml:id="Charm"><title>The Charm</title>
<note>The Charm was a children's periodical published by <orgName ref="#AddeyCo"
>Addey & Co.</orgName></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HowittsJournal"><title>Howitt's Journal</title>
<note>Howitt's was a weekly periodical launched by <persName ref="#HowittWilliam"
>William Howitt</persName> in <date when="1847">1847.</date> The journal
went bankrupt in <date when="1848">1848.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="JerroldsMagazine">
<title>Douglas Jerrold's Shilling Magazine</title>
<note>Jerrold's was a monthly magazine brought out by <orgName
ref="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury and Evans</orgName> that ran from <date
when="1845">1845</date> to <date when="1848">1848</date>. The magazine was
similar in tone to <title corresp="#Punch">Punch</title> and had overlapping
contributors.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BentleysMiscellany">
<title>Bentley's Miscellany</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bentley's Miscellany was a popular Victorian
periodical founded by <persName ref="#Bentley"><orgName ref="#Bentley">Richard
Bentley</orgName></persName> and edited by <persName
ref="#DickensCharles">Charles Dickens.</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="IllustratedNews"><title>Illustrated News</title>
<note>The Illustrated London News was a weekly news periodical published from
<date from="1842" to="1971">1842 to 1971.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ArtJournal">
<title><date from="1838" to="1849"><title>The Art Union</title></date></title>
<title><date from="1849" to="1912"><title>The Art Journal</title></date></title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Art Journal was an influential art magazine
based in <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>. It was edited by
<persName ref="#HallSamuelCarter">Samuel Carter
Hall.</persName><lb/>Mandler, Peter, "Hall, Samuel Carter (1800-1889)," ODNB.
</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OnceAWeek">
<title>Once a Week: an Illustrated Miscellany of Literature, Popular Science, and
Art</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Once a Week was a weekly illustrated periodical
published by <orgName ref="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury and Evans</orgName> between
<date from="1859" to="1880">1859 and 1880.</date><lb/> John Sutherland <hi
rend="italics">The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction</hi> (Stanford:
Stanford UP, 1989), 479–480.<lb/> “Once a Week,” <hi rend="italics">Rosetti
Archive Periodicals</hi>, accessed 12 May, 2016,
http://www.rossettiarchive.org/docs/ap4.o4.raw.html. </note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="EverySaturday">
<title>Every Saturday: A Journal of Choice Reading Selected from Foreign Current
Literature</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Every Saturday was a weekly periodical published by
<orgName ref="#TicknorFields">Ticknor and Fields</orgName>
<date from="1859" to="1880">from 1866 to 1874.</date><lb/> Frank Luther Mott,
"Every Saturday," <hi rend="italics">A History of American Magazines
1865–1885</hi> (Cambridge MA, Harvard UP, 1938), 357–362.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=zt1V-ISXFsoC&pg=PA357&lpg=PA357&dq=ticknor+and+fields+every+saturday&source=bl&ots=4LueLzww_5&sig=9cA9QSzlfMqOVgOBGNf4qSBM_Jc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiDwIW0jt_MAhWDz4MKHarGDzUQ6AEIMTAE#v=onepage&q=ticknor%20and%20fields%20every%20saturday&f=false --></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Cornhill">
<title>The Cornhill Magazine</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Cornhill Magazine (<date from="1860" to="1975"
>1860–1975</date>) was a monthly illustrated periodical published by
<orgName ref="#SmithElder">Smith, Elder & Co.</orgName> and aimed
towards middle-class readers. <persName ref="#ThackerayWilliamMakepeace"
>William Makepeace Thackeray</persName> was the magazine's original
editor.<lb/> ODNB.<lb/> Barbara Quinn Schmidt, "'The Cornhill Magazine':
Celebrating Success," <hi rend="italics">Victorian Periodical Review</hi> 32.3
(Fall 1999): 202–208.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AtlanticMonthly"><title>The Atlantic Monthly</title>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Boston">Boston</placeName></pubPlace>
<publisher><orgName ref="#PhillipSampsonCo">Phillip, Sampson and Co.</orgName>
(<date from="1857" to="1859">1857 – 1859</date>)</publisher>
<publisher><orgName ref="#TicknorFields">Ticknor & Fields</orgName> (<date
from="1859" to="1873">1859 – 1873</date>)</publisher>
<publisher><orgName ref="#HougtonMifflin">Houghton & Mifflin</orgName> (<date
from="1873" to="1908">1873 – 1908</date>)</publisher>
<note resp="FukushimaKailey">The Atlantic Monthly is an American literary and
cultural periodical that was founded <placeName ref="#Boston"
>Boston</placeName> in <date when="1857">1857.</date> The periodical aimed
to attract literary elites, competing with <orgName ref="#HarpersMagazine"
>Harper's</orgName> and its large middle-class readership.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OurYoungFolks"><title>Our Young Folks</title><note
resp="#FukushimaKailey">Our Young Folks was an illustrated literary periodical
for children published weekly by <orgName ref="#TicknorFields">Ticknor &
Fields.</orgName></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Dial"><title>The Dial</title><note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>The
Dial</title> was a weekly <placeName>London</placeName> newspaper planned by
the National Newspaper League Company. It was edited by <persName
ref="#BaynePeter">Peter Bayne</persName>
<date from="1860" to="1862">from 1860 to 1862</date>, during which time, the
paper succeeded but <persName>Bayne</persName> went bankrupt.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Cameleon">
<title><foreign xml:lang="fr">Le Caméléon: ou Recueil Mensuel de Morceaux de
Littérature, Sciences, Beaux Arts, Histoire, Géographie, Voyages,
etc.</foreign></title>
<title>Le Caméléon littéraire</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Le Caméléon</title> was a monthly
French-language periodical. Some of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName>
first published works were translations of texts from <title>Le
Caméléon.</title></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ChambersMiscellany">
<title>Chambers's Miscellany of Useful and Entertaining Tracts</title>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName></pubPlace>
<date from="1844" to="1847"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Chambers's Miscellany,</title> was a series
of short pamphlets published by <orgName ref="#Chambers">William & Robert
Chambers</orgName> from <date from="1844" to="1847">1844 to 1847.</date>
Each pamphlet included stories and poetry that centred around a single topic.
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> contributed to <title>Chambers's
Miscellany</title> early in her career.<lb/> Aileen Fyfe, Steam-Powered
Knowledge: William Chambers and the Business of Publishing, 1820-1860 (Chicago:
University of Chicago P), 75. </note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BlackwoodsMagazine">
<title>Blackwood's Edingburgh Magazine</title>
<note resp="AndersonHannah">Blackwood's Magazine was located in <placeName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Edinburgh">Edinburgh.</placeName> It was founded by
the grandfather (and namesake) of <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#BlackwoodWilliam">William
Blackwood.</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HouseholdWords">
<title>Household Words</title>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah"><title>Household Words</title> was a weekly literary
magazine edited by <persName ref="#DickensCharles">Charles
Dickens.</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HarpersYoungPeople">
<title>Harper's Young People</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LloydsList">
<title>Lloyd's List</title>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Lloyd's List</title> is a long-running daily
newspaper that focusses on merchants' and maritime news.</note>
</bibl>
</listBibl>
</div>
<div type="WorksByCraik">
<!-- This list is for works by Craik -->
<listBibl>
<bibl xml:id="MissTommy"><title>Miss Tommy</title></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Ogilvies">
<author>
<persName> Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Ogilvies</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1849"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Olive">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC"> Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Olive</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1850"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HeadOfTheFamily">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Head of the Family</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1852"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AgathasHusband">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Agatha's Husband</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1853"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="JohnHalifaxGentleman">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">John Halifax, Gentleman</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</publisher>
<date when="1856"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LifeForLife">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Life for a Life</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</publisher>
<date when="1859"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OurYear">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Our Year</title>
<pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#TicknorFields">Ticknor & Fields</publisher>
<date when="1860"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="MistressAndMaid">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Mistress and Maid</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</publisher>
<date when="1862"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ChristiansMistake">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m"> Christian's Mistake</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</publisher>
<date when="1865"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NobleLife">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Noble Life</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1866"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TwoMarriages">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Two Marriages</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1867"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WomansKingdom">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Woman's Kingdom</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1868"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BraveLady">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Brave Lady</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1870"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Hannah">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Hannah</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1871"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="YoungMrsJardine">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Young Mrs. Jardine</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1879"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ColaMonti">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Cola Monti</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ArthurHallVirtueCo">Arthur Hall, Virtue & Co</publisher>
<date when="1849"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="KingArthur">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC"> Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">King Arthur: Not a Love Story</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher/>
<date when="1886"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AliceLearmont">
<author>
<persName ref="DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Alice Learmont: a Fairy Tale</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1852"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Avillion">
<author>
<persName ref="DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Avillion and Other Tales</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="SmithElder">Smith Elder & Co</publisher>
<date when="1853"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Hero">
<author>
<persName ref="DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Hero: Philip's Book</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#AddeyCo">Addey & Co</publisher>
<date when="1853"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="DoubleHouse">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Double House</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ParkerAndSon">John W. Parker & Son</publisher>
<date/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"A Double House" was originally published in <title
corresp="#Frasers">Fraser's Magazine.</title></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HowToWinLove">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">How to Win Love, or Rhoda's Lesson</title>
<pubPlace/>
<publisher/>
<date when="1848"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Before settling on a title for "How to Win Love, or
Rhoda's Lesson", Dinah Craik appears to have titled this children's tale
"Winifred Lee" after one of its central characters.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LastHouseInCecilSt">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Last House in Cecil Street</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ParkerAndSon">John W. Parker & Son</publisher>
<date/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"The Last House in Cecil Street" was originally
published in <title corresp="#Frasers">Fraser's Magazine.</title></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LittleLychetts">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Little Lychetts</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#AddeyCo">Addey & Co</publisher>
<date when="1855"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LowMarriage">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Low Marriage</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ParkerAndSon">John W. Parker & Son</publisher>
<date/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"A Low Marriage" was originally published in <title
corresp="#Frasers">Fraser's Magazine.</title></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SongsOfOurYouth">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Songs of our Youth</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#DaldyIsbisterCo">Daldy, Isbister & Co</publisher>
<date when="1875"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Songs of our Youth was a collection of Swedish,
French, Irish, Gaelic, Welsh, Old English, and original melodies with lyrics by
Dinah Mulock Craik. The collection contained original music by B.R.M.— an
amateur composer who many believed to be Dinah's deceased brother <persName
ref="#MulockBen">Benjamin Robert Mulock.</persName><lb/> John Hannavy, ed.,
"Mulock, Benjamin Robert," <hi rend="italics">Encyclopedia of
Nineteenth-Century Photography</hi> (New York: Routledge, 2008): 959-960,
accessed August 12, 2015.<lb/>
<lb/>"Music," <hi rend="italics">The Athenaeum</hi>, no. 2471 (March 6, 1875):
333. accessed August 11, 2015.<lb/> "Music," <hi rend="italics">The Atlantic
Monthly</hi> 37 (1876): 251-252. accessed August 11, 2015.<lb/>
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="DreadfulGhost">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">A Dreadful Ghost</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury and Evans</publisher>
<date when="1862-02"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"A Dreadful Ghost" was a short story by <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published in <title corresp="#OnceAWeek"
>Once a Week</title> in <date when="1862-02">February 1862.</date> It was
later included in volume II of Dinah's <date when="1870">1870</date> book of
short stories, <title corresp="#UnkindWord">The Unkind Word and Other
Stories.</title><lb/> Dinah Craik, <hi rend="italics">The Unkind Word and
Other Stories</hi> II (London, Hurst & Blackett, 1870), 73–88. <!--https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=zCcCAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA73.-->
<lb/>Sally Mitchell, Dinah Mulock Craik (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983),
134–135. </note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="UnkindWord">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Unkind Word and Other Stories</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</publisher>
<date when="1870"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Unkind Word and Other Stories was a collection
of Dinah Craik's short stories published in two volumes by <orgName
ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst and Blackett</orgName> in <date when="1870"
>1870.</date>
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="UnknownCountry"><title>An Unknown Country</title><author ref="#DMC"
>Dinah Mulock Craik</author><date when="1887"/><note resp="#FukushimaKailey">An
Unknown Country was a travel narrative recording one of Dinah's trips to
northern <placeName ref="#Ireland">Ireland.</placeName> It was published in the
English Illustrated Magazine in <date when="1887">1887.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ConcerningMen">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Concerning Men</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#SmithElder">Smith, Elder & Co.</publisher>
<date when="1887"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"Concerning Men," was first published anonymously in
volume 9 of <title corresp="#Cornhill">The Cornhill Magazine</title> (<date
when="1887-10">October 1887</date>). In Craik's own words, the essay
examines "the mutual limitations of each sex, and its supplementation by the
other." <lb/> Dinah Mulock Craik, "Concerning Men," <hi rend="italics">The
Cornhill Magazine</hi> 9.56 (Oct. 1887): 368–377.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=N-rPAAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA368&ots=9_o2h7vZoh&dq=%22Concerning%20Men%22%20Cornhill&pg=PA368#v=onepage&q=%22Concerning%20Men%22%20Cornhill&f=false -->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AMansWooing"><title>A Man's Wooing </title><author><persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah Craik</persName></author><note>"A Man's Wooing" was a short poem by
Dinah published in <title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's
Magazine</title>.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TravellingandTravellers">
<title>Travelling & Travellers</title>
<author ref="DMC">Dinah Craik</author>
<!-- Dinah mentions this in PU211. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SavetheChildren">
<title>Save the Children</title>
<author ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</author>
<!--- Dinah mentions this in PU 195 and PU 209. Kelsey Jacobi --></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Blind">
<title>Blind</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey"> Blind is an essay found in the <date when="1860-11"
>November 1860</date> to <date when="1861-04">April 1861</date> volume of
<title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's Magazine</title> in which
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> recounts a visit to <persName
ref="#GilbertElizabeth">Elizabeth Gilbert's</persName>
<orgName ref="#BlindAssociation">Association for Promoting the General Welfare
of the Blind.</orgName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="CathairFhargus">
<title>Cathair Fhargus (Fergus's Seat)</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">Cathair Fhargus is a poem by Craik, found in the <date
when="1860-11">November 1860</date> to <date when="1861-04">April
1861</date> volume of <title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's
Magazine</title>.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AdventuresofBrownie"><title>Adventures of a Brownie, as Told to my
Child</title>
<date when="1872">1872</date>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">Adventures of a Brownie was a children's book of
short stories about a brownie, a traditional Scottish household creature.
Published</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TheSwanMaiden"><note resp="GivogueStevensonLecia">This may have shown
up in <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> novel <title ref="#TheFairyBook"
>"The Fairy Book"</title> as "The Six Swans" story.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TheFairyBook">
<title>The Fairy Book: Best Popular Fairy Stories Selected and Rendered
Anew</title>
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik </persName>
</author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan.</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace>London and Cambridge</pubPlace>
<date when="1863"/>
<note resp="#GivogueStevensonLecia">This book by <persName ref="DMC">Dinah Mulock
Craik</persName> was published in <date when="1863">1863</date>. It is a
collection of fairy stories from several countries. </note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BrotherJonathansPet">
<title>Brother Jonathan's Pet</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Brother Jonathan's Pet</title> was a short
story by <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published anonymously in
<title ref="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title> on <date
when="1858-01-16">January 16, 1858 (no. 211).</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="GoingOutToPlay">
<title>Going Out to Play</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Going Out to Play</title> was a short story
by <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published anonymously in <title
ref="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title> on <date
when="1858-03-06">March 6, 1858 (no. 218).</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WantSomethingToRead">
<title>Want Something to Read</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Want Something to Read</title> was a short
story by <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published anonymously in
<title ref="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title> on <date
when="1858-05-08">May 8, 1858 (no. 227).</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OurLostPet">
<title>Our Lost Pet</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Our Lost Pet</title> was a short story by
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> published anonymously in <title
ref="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title> on <date
when="1858-05-08">May 29, 1858 (no. 230).</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WomansThoughtsAboutWomen">
<title level="m">A Woman's Thoughts About Women</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1858"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>A Woman's Thoughts About Women</title> was a
women's advice book by <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik.</persName> The
book was a compilation of essays on subjects such as self-dependence,
worldliness, and female friendship – all originally published anonymously in
<title corresp="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title> in
<date when="1857">1857.</date>
<title>A Woman's Thoughts About Women</title> was published without <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s permission in the <placeName ref="#USA">United
States</placeName> in the same year of its original publication.<lb/> Sally
Mitchell, Dinah Mulock Craik (Boston: Twayne, 1983), 53-55.
<!--KF: The American publication might have been done by the firm Rudd & Carleton. It doesn't look like Dinah did business with this firm, but they published "A Woman's Thoughts" in 1858 (and no other titles by DMC as far as I can tell). See: https://books.google.ca/books?id=mkraAAAAMAAJ&dq=A%20Woman's%20Thoughts%20About%20Women%201858&pg=PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false -->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Wolfenbuttel">
<title>Sophia of Wolfenbuttel</title>
<author><persName ref="#BramieriLuigi">Luigi Bramieri</persName></author>
<editor><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></editor>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1845"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Sophia of Wolfenbuttel</title> was a story
that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> translated from Italian for
publication in <title corresp="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers' Edinburgh
Journal</title> in <date when="1845">1845.</date> The original story was
from an <date when="1816">1816</date> Italian book by <persName
ref="#BramieriLuigi">L. Bramieri</persName> called the <title
corresp="NouvelleMoraliFrancescoSoave">Nouvelle morali di Francesco
Soave.</title></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SisterOfRembrandt">
<title>The Sister of Rembrandt: a Flemish Story</title>
<author><persName>Samuel-Henri Berthoud</persName></author>
<editor><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></editor>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1845"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> translated and
extended "<title>The Sister of Rembrandt</title>" from the French original in
<date when="1845">1845.</date> It appeared in in volume 6 of <title
corresp="#ChambersMiscellany">Chambers' Miscellany.</title> The original was
published in the French periodical, <title corresp="#Cameleon">Le
Caméléon</title>. <lb/> "The Sister of Rembrandt: a Flemish Story,"
Chambers' Miscellany of Useful and Entertaining Tracts vol. 5-6 (Edinburgh: W
& R Chambers, 1845) no. 54, Web.
<!--KF: This issue of Chambers' Miscellany is on Google Books. --></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ElisabettaSirani">
<title>The Story of Elisabetta Sirani</title>
<author><persName ref="#MalvasiaCarloCesare">Carlo Cesare
Malvasia</persName></author>
<editor><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></editor>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Chambers">W. & R. Chambers</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1847-07-31"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Elisabetta Sirani</title> was a short story
from <title corresp="#FelsinaPittrice">Felsina Pittrice</title> (<date
when="1841">1841</date> that <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>
translated in the early <date notBefore="1841" notAfter="1844">1840s.</date>
The translation was originall published in <title corresp="#ChambersMagazine"
>Chambers's Journal</title> in <date when="1847-07">July 1847</date> and
later appeared in <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s short story
collection <title>Romantic Tales</title> (<date when="1857">1857</date>).<lb/>
<!--KF: Chambers' Edinburgh Journal 8.187 (31 July 1847) is available on Google Books-->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NewTeacher">
<title>The New Teacher</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">"The New Teacher" was a text that <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> either wrote or translated for publication by
<orgName ref="#Chambers">William & Robert Chambers</orgName> in <date
when="1845">1845.</date> It seems to have been rejected.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TheHouseboat">
<title>In A Houseboat</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">In A Houseboat was a short story published in <date
when="1884">1884</date> by <orgName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Harpers"
>Harpers</orgName>.</note><!--HA: in a book by Harpers which also contains Miss Tommy-->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ThirtyYears">
<title>Thirty Years, Being Poems New and Old</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<publisher>Macmillan</publisher>
<date when="1880">1880</date>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">This book of poems was published by <orgName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co</orgName> in <date
when="1880">1880.</date> Many poems were reprints from <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah's</persName> earlier publications.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OnLivinginPerspective">
<title>On Living in Perspective</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<date when="1869"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TheLastEarl">
<title>The Last Earl of Cairnforth</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<note resp="AndersonHannah">The Last Earl of Cairnforth was a one volume tale that
<persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DMC">Craik</persName> wanted to appear
anonymously in <title corresp="CraikSiteIndex.xml#BlackwoodsMagazine"
>Blackwood's magazine</title> prior to being published as a whole.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BreadUponTheWaters">
<title>Bread Upon the Waters</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName>Governesses' Benevolent Institution</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1852"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Poems">
<title>Poems</title>
<author><persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1860"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NovelsAndNovelMakers">
<title level="a">Novels and Novel Makers</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DMC">Dinah Mulock
Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#StrahanCo">Alexander Strahan &
Co</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Edinburgh">Edinburgh</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1881-05"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>On Novels and Novel Makers</title> was an
essay by <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> that was published in
<title corresp="#GoodWords">Good Words</title> on <date when="1881-05-01">1
May 1881.</date> The essay was reprinted in <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah's</persName>
<date when="1882">1882</date> collection of essays, <title>Plain
Speaking.</title><lb/>Sally Mitchell, "Selected Bibliography," Dinah Mulock
Craik (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983), 135-136.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="StudiesFromLife">
<title level="m">Studies From Life</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DMC">Dinah Mulock
Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1861"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Studies from Life</title> was one of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> essay collections. It consisted
mainly of reprinted essays published in <title corresp="ChambersMagazine"
>Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title>
<date from="1855" to="1858">from 1855 to 1858.</date><lb/>Sally Mitchell,
"Selected Bibliography," Dinah Mulock Craik (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983),
134.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SermonsOutOfChurch">
<title level="m">Sermons out of Church</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DMC">Dinah Mulock
Craik</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="DaldyIsbisterCo">Daldy, Isbister &
Co</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1875"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Sermons our of Church</title> was one of
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> essay collections. It consisted of
semiphilisophical essays on the topics of proper character and
conduct.<lb/>Sally Mitchell, "Selected Bibliography," Dinah Mulock Craik
(Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983), 100, 134.</note>
</bibl>
</listBibl>
</div>
<div type="WorksByOthers">
<!--This list is for works not by Craik.-->
<listBibl>
<bibl xml:id="AuthorOfJohnHalifax">
<title level="m">The Author of John Halifax, Gentleman, a Memoir</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#ParrLouis">Louisa
Parr</persName></author>
<publisher><placeName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</placeName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1898"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>The Author of John Halifax, Gentleman</title>
was a memoir of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Craik</persName> written by
<persName ref="#ParrLouisa">Louisa Parr</persName>. It was originally a
section of <title>Women Novelists of Queen Victoria's Reign</title> (<date
when="1897">1897</date>), also published by <orgName ref="#HurstBlackett"
>Hurst & Blackett.</orgName><lb/>Sally Mitchell, "Selected
Bibliography," Dinah Mulock Craik (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1983),
138.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="MaryBarton">
<title level="m">Mary Barton: a Tale of Manchester Life</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GaskellElizabeth">Elizabeth
Gaskell</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman & Hall</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1848"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Mary Barton</persName> is a "condition of
England novel" that centres around the working classes of <placeName
ref="#Manchester">Manchester.</placeName>
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TaleOfTwoCities">
<title level="m">A Tale of Two Cities</title>
<author><persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#DickensCharles">Charles
Dickens</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#ChapmanHall">Chapman & Hall</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1859"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><placeName>A Tale of Two Cities</placeName> is a
social problem novel by <persName ref="#DickensCharles">Charles
Dickens</persName> serialized in <date when="1859">1859</date>. The two
cities referenced in the title are <placeName ref="#London">London</placeName>
and <placeName ref="#Paris">Paris</placeName> before and during <rs
type="event">the French Revolution.</rs></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ElijahMusic">
<title>Elijah</title>
<author><persName>Felix Mendelssohn</persName></author>
<date from="1837" to="1846"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Elijah</title> is an oratorio written by the
acclaimed German-Jewish composer <persName>Felix Mendelssohn.</persName> The
initial plans for the song were drafted with another composer named
<persName>Karl Klingemann.</persName><lb/> Howard E. Smither, A History of
the Oratorio: The Oratorio in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries vol. 4
(Chapel Hill: U North Carolina P, 2000) Web. <!--Google Books-->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="RolfsLeap">
<title>Rolf's Leap</title>
<author><persName ref="#CraikGeorgiana">Georgiana Craik </persName></author>
<date when="1886"/>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">Rolf's Leap is a story about a dog written for <title
corresp="#OurYoungFolks">"Our Young Folks"</title> by <persName ref="#DMC"
>Craik's</persName> cousin <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#CraikGeorgiana"
>Georgiana Craik</persName>.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="JaneEyre">
<author>
<persName ref="#BronteCharlotte">Charlotte Brontë</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Jane Eyre</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#SmithElder">Smith, Elder & Co</publisher>
<date when="1847"/></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Balder">
<author>
<persName ref="#DobellSydney">Sydney Dobell</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Balder</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#SmithElder">Smith, Elder & Co</publisher>
<date when="1854"/></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TomBrown">
<title>Tom Brown</title>
<author ref="#HughesThomas">Thomas Hughes</author>
<date when="1857"/>
<note>Tom Brown's School Days was a children's novel by <persName
ref="#HughesThomas">Thomas Hughes.</persName> It follows the life of a young
boy in an 1830s Rugby school.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="CupAndTheLip">
<author>
<persName ref="#MrsValentine">Laura Jewry</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Cup & the Lip</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#TCNewby">T.C. Newby</publisher>
<date when="1851"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AsILay">
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"
><!--Dinah refers to a song entitled "As I Lay" in
PU65 in the Princeton Parrish Collection.--></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="EnochArden"><title>Enoch Arden</title><author>Tennyson</author><note>A
narrative poem by Lord Alfred Tennyson.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Householdgods">
<title>Household Gods</title>
<author/>
<note>A play</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="AuroraLeigh">
<title>Aurora Leigh</title>
<author/>
<note resp="BourrierKaren"><title>Aurora Leigh</title> is an epic poem telling the
story of a young woman writer by <persName ref="#BrowningElizabethBarrett"
>Elizabeth Barrett Browning</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HistoiredeFrance">
<author>
<persName ref="#GuizotFrancois">François Guizot</persName>
</author>
<title level="m"><foreign xml:lang="fr">L'Histoire de France depuis les temps les
plus reculés jusqu'en 1789 – racontée à mes petits enfants</foreign></title>
<pubPlace>Paris</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#Hachette"><foreign xml:lang="fr">Librairie Hachette &
Co</foreign></publisher>
<date/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Douglas">
<title level="m">Douglas</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#DaldyIsbisterCo">Daldy, Isbister & Co</publisher>
<date when="1875"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">“Douglas” was the title of a ballad published in
Dinah’s <date when="1875">1875</date> musical collection, <hi rend="italics"
>Songs of our Youth.</hi><lb/>
<lb/> "Music," <hi rend="italics">The Athenæum</hi>, no. 2471 (March 6, 1875):
333. accessed August 11, 2015.<lb/>
</note>
</bibl>
</listBibl>
<bibl xml:id="MoorlandCottage">
<author>
<persName ref="GaskellElizabeth">Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Moorland Cottage</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<date when="1850"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BerthasLove">
<author>
<persName ref="#MissJames">Miss James</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Bertha's Love</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ParkerAndSon">John W. Parker and Son</publisher>
<date when="1853"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bertha's Love was published anonymously in volume 48 of
<title corresp="#Frasers">Fraser's Magazine</title>. In letter PU50 in the
Princeton Parrish collection, Dinah reveals that the story was authored by her
friend <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#MissJames">Miss James</persName>.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="RichardII">
<author>
<persName ref="#Shakespeare">William Shakespeare</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Tragedy of Richard II</title>
<pubPlace/>
<publisher/>
<date notBefore="1595" notAfter="1597">Between 1595 and 1597</date>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Richard II is a history play by <persName
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Shakespeare">William Shakespeare.</persName> It is
based on King Richard II of Englands's life from the time of his coronation to his
deposition (<date from="1377" to="1399">1377-1399</date>).</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HistoryofaHousehold">
<author>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The History of a Household</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#SharpesLondonMag">Sharpe's London Magazine</publisher>
<date when="1849"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TalesofaGrandfather">
<author>
<persName ref="#ScottWalter">Walter Scott</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Tales of a Grandfather</title>
<pubPlace>Edinburgh</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#CadellCo">Cadell & Co</publisher>
<date notBefore="1828" notAfter="1831">Between 1828 and 1831</date>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WondersofEngraving">
<author>
<persName ref="#DuplessisGeorges">Georges Duplessis</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">The Wonders of Engraving</title>
<pubPlace/>
<publisher/>
<date when="1870"/>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="VanityFair">
<author>
<persName ref="#ThackerayWilliamMakepeace">William Makepeace Thackeray</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Vanity Fair</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#BradburyEvans"/>
<date from="1847" to="1848"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Vanity Fair was serialized in 20 parts in <title
corresp="#Punch">Punch</title> Magazine <date from="1847" to="1848">from 1847
to 1848</date>. It was later published in volume form by <orgName
ref="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury and Evans</orgName> in <date when="1848"
>1848</date>.<lb/> Sutherland, John ed., Introduction to <hi rend="italics"
>Vanity Fair</hi>, (Toronto: Oxford UP, 2008), vii-xxx. </note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="DonQuixote">
<title>Don Quixote</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Don Quixote is an early Spanish novel (<date
when="1605">1605</date>) written by <persName ref="#DeCervantesMiguel">Miguel
de Cervantes</persName>. <!--UCLA10.15-->
</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TwoWomen">
<author>
<persName ref="#CraikGeorgiana">Georgiana M. Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Two Women</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#Bentley">Richard Bentley and Son</publisher>
<date when="1880"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Two Women was a novel written by Dinah's cousin,
Georgiana Craik, published in <date when="1880">1880.</date> It appears to have
been originally titled A Story of Two Women <!-- See PU87 --><lb/>
<!-- Georgiana M. Craik, <hi rend="italics">Two Women,</hi> (London, Richard Bentley and Son, 1880), https://books.google.ca/books?id=TekBAAAAQAAJ&pg=PP7&lpg=PP7&dq=Georgiana+Craik+Two+Women+1880&source=bl&ots=kNyiy9_qQp&sig=6Hc_AE4phPqa_hOtNIQVgLTkLPc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiZs6-cit_MAhUowYMKHfs6CkgQ6AEIKjAE#v=onepage&q=Georgiana%20Craik%20Two%20Women%201880&f=false --></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="PriscillasLot">
<author>
<persName ref="#CraikGeorgiana">Georgiana M. Craik</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Priscilla's Lot</title>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#TicknorFields">Ticknor and Fields</publisher>
<date when="1867"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Priscilla's Lot was a three-chapter short story written
by Dinah's cousin, Georgiana Craik. It was published in <orgName
ref="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury and Evans</orgName>'s <title corresp="#OnceAWeek"
>Once a Week</title> and also appeared in <orgName ref="#TicknorFields">Ticknor
and Fields</orgName>'s <title corresp="#EverySaturday">Every
Saturday.</title><lb/> Georgiana M. Craik, "Priscilla's Lot, Chapter III" <hi
rend="italics">Once a Week</hi> 3 (1867), 537–540.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=FBhLAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA713&lpg=PA713&dq=%22Priscilla%27s+Lot%22&source=bl&ots=qkS5O2WBow&sig=wjXmuglbd96_dXdzvICxtSMyUnU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwioq-bGjN_MAhUj4IMKHaYfCf8Q6AEIIjAC#v=onepage&q=%22Priscilla's%20Lot%22&f=false -->
Georgiana M. Craik, "Priscilla's Lot, Chapter III" <hi rend="italics">Every
Saturday</hi> 3 (1867), 714–716.
<!-- https://books.google.ca/books?id=FBhLAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA713&lpg=PA713&dq=%22Priscilla%27s+Lot%22&source=bl&ots=qkS5O2WBow&sig=wjXmuglbd96_dXdzvICxtSMyUnU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwioq-bGjN_MAhUj4IMKHaYfCf8Q6AEIIjAC#v=onepage&q=%22Priscilla's%20Lot%22&f=false -->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="PoemsBeforeCongress">
<author>
<persName ref="#BrowningElizabethBarrett">Elizabeth Barrett Browning</persName>
</author>
<title level="m">Poems Before Congress</title>
<publisher corresp="#ChapmanHall">Chapman and Hall</publisher>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date when="1860"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Barrett-Browning's Poems Before Congress was a
collection of controversial political poetry. It received an overwhelmingly
negative response following its English publication in <date when="1860"
>1860,</date> and was frequently decried as "anti-English."<lb/> Katherine
Montwieler, "Domestic Politics: Gender, Protest, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning's
Poems before Congress," Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 24.2 (2005): 291-317.
<!--http://www.jstor.org/stable/20455242--></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="UnderTwoFlags"><title>Under Two Flags</title><author ref="#Ouida"
>Ouida</author>
<date when="1867"/></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SundayMagazine">
<title>Sunday Magazine</title>
<publisher>Alexander Strahan</publisher>
<date from="1864" to="1905"/>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey"><title corresp="SundayMagazine">Sunday Magazine</title>
was an Evangelical journal designed to be read on the Sabbath. It was designed to
be a compliment to <title corresp="#GoodWords">Good Words</title>, which Dinah
often published in.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WaterGipsies">
<title>Water Gipsies</title>
<author ref="#MeadeElizabeth">Elizabeth Meade</author>
<!-- Dinah mentions this text in letter PU 208. Kelsey Jacobi --></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NedLocksley">
<title>Ned Locksley, the Etonian; Or, the Only Son</title>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Bentley">Richard Bentley</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Ned Locksley</title> was a novel by <persName
ref="#MrChermside">Richard Seymour C. Chermside.</persName> Dinah helped to
edit this novel for publication by <orgName ref="#Macmillan"
>Macmillan.</orgName></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LifeofWilliamBlake"><note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>The Life of
William Blake</title> was a popular biography of the Romantic poet, <persName
ref="#BlakeWilliam">William Blake,</persName> written by <persName
ref="#GilchristAlexander">Alexander Gilchrist.</persName> It was published in
<date when="1863">1863</date> after Gilchrist's death.<lb/> ODNB.<lb/>
<!--See https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=6HdAAAAAYAAJ&rdid=book-6HdAAAAAYAAJ&rdot=1 --></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HerbertsPrize"><title level="m">Captain Herbert</title><author><persName
ref="#CupplesGeorge">George
Cupples</persName></author><pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher corresp="#ChapmanHall">Chapman & Hall</publisher>
<date when="1864">1864</date>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Captain Herbert</title> was a 3-volume novel by
<persName ref="#CupplesGeorge">George Cupples.</persName> Dinah reviewed this
novel for <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co</orgName> around <date
when="1860">1860</date> but it was published by <orgName ref="#ChapmanHall"
>Chapman and Hall</orgName> in <date when="1864">1864.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="MoorCottage">
<title level="m">The Moor Cottage</title>
<author ref="#MissBlyth">May Beverley</author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co.</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1861">1861</date>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>The Moor Cottage</title> was an <date
when="1861">1861</date> novel by <persName ref="#MissBlyth">May
Beverley.</persName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> read and edited this novel as a publisher's
reader for <orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co.</orgName> and praised its
description of life in <placeName ref="#Crimea">Crimea.</placeName>
<!--https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=osYBAAAAQAAJ&rdid=book-osYBAAAAQAAJ&rdot=1-->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HampsteadHeathens">
<title>Hampstead Heathens</title>
<author><persName ref="#MassonDavid">David Masson</persName></author>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Harold">
<title>Harold</title>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">This appears to be an unpublished work, as Dinah said this
was not suitable to be published by <orgName ref="#MacmillanCo"
>Macmillan.</orgName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="CoachandFour">
<title>Coach & Four </title>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">This appears to be an unpublished work, as Dinah said this
was not suitable to be published by <orgName ref="#MacmillanCo"
>Macmillan.</orgName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Bengala">
<title>Bengala, or, Some Time Ago</title>
<author><persName ref="#VidalMay">Mary Vidal</persName></author>
<date when="1860">1860 </date>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="KyloeJock">
<title>Kyloe-Jock and the Weird of Wanton Walls</title>
<author><persName ref="#CupplesGeorge">George Cupples</persName></author>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="GoblinMarket">
<title>Goblin Market</title>
<author><persName ref="#RosettiChristina">Christina Rossetti</persName></author>
<publisher corresp="#MacmillanCo">Macmillan Co.</publisher>
<date when="1862">1862</date>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="OutoftheDepths">
<title> Out of the Depths: The Story of a Woman's Life</title>
<author ref="JebbHG">H.G. Jebb</author>
<date when="1859"/>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan</orgName></publisher>
<note>Out of the Depths was originally published anonymously.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="RiverPontimac"><title>River Pontimac</title>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">River Pontimac was recommended to Dinah by <persName
ref="#HooperJane">Mrs. Hooper.</persName> Dinah did not read it.</note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WomenandWarriors"><title>Women and Warriors</title></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Chatterton"><title>Chatterton</title>is possibly an unpublished poetry
manuscript.</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Agnes">
<title level="m">Agnes</title>
<author><persName ref="#OliphantMargaret">Margaret Oliphant</persName></author>
<publisher><placeName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst &
Blackett</placeName></publisher>
<date when="1866"/>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Agnes</title> was a domestic realist novel by
the popular novelist, <persName ref="#OliphantMargaret">Margaret
Oliphant.</persName> The novel is set in <placeName ref="#Italy"
>Italy</placeName> and follows the life of <persName>Agnes
Stanfield</persName>—a blacksmith's daughter who marries above her station.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NouvelleMoraliFrancescoSoave">
<title><foreign xml:lang="it">Nouvelle Morali di Francesco Soave</foreign></title>
<author><persName ref="#BramieriLuigi">Luigi Bramieri</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName>F. Seguin aîné</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#Avignon">Avignon</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1816"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">In <date when="1845">1845</date>, <persName ref="#DMC"
>Dinah</persName> read and published a tale called "<title
corresp="Wolfenbuttel">Sophia of Wolfenbuttel</title>" from <persName
ref="#BramieriLuigi">Luigi Bramieri</persName>'s <title><foreign xml:lang="it"
>Nouvelle Morali di Francesco Soave</foreign></title></note>
<!--KF: Publication information found on p. 250 of "Bibliographie de la France: 1816." Available on Google Books-->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="FelsinaPittrice">
<title><foreign xml:lang="it">Felsina Pittrice: Vite de'Pittori
Bolognesi</foreign></title>
<title>Felsina Pittrice: Lives of Bolognese Painters</title>
<author><persName ref="#MalvasiaCarloCesare">Carlo Cesare
Malvasia</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName>Tipografia Guidi all'Ancora</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName>Bologna</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1841"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Felsine Pittrice</title> was a collection of
stories about Bolognese painters, mostly from the seventeenth century. <persName
ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> read and translated a tale from this collection in
<date notBefore="1840" notAfter="1844">the early 1840s.</date>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s translation of <title
corresp="#SiraniElisabetta">Elisabetta Sirani</title> was published in <title
corresp="#ChambersMagazine">Chambers' Journal</title> in <date when="1847-07"
>July 1847.</date><lb/>
<!--KF: Felsina Pittrice is available on Google Books.-->
</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Stratagems">
<title>Stratagems: A Story for Young People</title>
<author><persName ref="#CroslandCamillaDufour">Camilla Dufour
Crosland</persName></author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#HallVirtueCo">Arthur Hall, Virtue &
Co.</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1849"/>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Stratagems</title> was a children's book by
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> good friend <persName
ref="#CroslandCamillaDufour">Camilla Dufour Crosland.</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="BonnieDundee">
<title>Bonnie Dundee</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Bonnie Dundee</title> is a traditional Scottish
folk song. A version of it was popularized as a poem and song by <persName
ref="#ScottWalter">Walter Scott</persName> in <date when="1825"
>1825.</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="CamYeByAtholBraes">
<title>Cam Ye By Atholl</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Cam Ye By Atholl</title> is a traditional
Scottish folk song.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Consolation">
<title>Consolation</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>"Consolation"</title> was a piece of writing by
a friend of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend <persName
ref="#LeslieEliza">Miss Leslie.</persName>
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> attempted to get it published by <orgName
ref="#Chambers">Chambers</orgName> on her behalf <date notBefore="1848"
notAfter="1851">around 1850.</date></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="FirstandLastNovel"><title>My First and Last Novel</title><note
resp="#AndersonHannah">My First and Last Novel was an anonymous work by a member
of the <title corresp="#HouseholdWords">Household Words staff</title> which
<persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> recommended to <title
corresp="#BlackwoodsMagazine">Blackwood.</title></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Newcomes">
<title>The Newcomes</title>
<author ref="#ThackerayWilliamMakepeace">William Makepeace Thackeray</author>
<publisher><orgName ref="#BradburyEvans">Bradbury & Evans</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<date when="1855"/>
</bibl>
</div>
<div type="StubEntriesTitles">
<!-- The following are all stub entries to be defined/researched and developed -->
<head>Stub Entries Titles</head>
<listBibl>
<!-- Periodicals -->
<bibl xml:id="ChambersMagazine">
<title>Chambers's Edinburgh Journal</title>
<note resp="ParkerJanice">Chamber's Journal was a magazine founded by William
Chambers in Edinburgh in 1832. </note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HarpersMagazine">
<title>Harper's Monthly Magazine</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="GoodWords">
<title>Good Words</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="MacmillansMagazine">
<title>Macmillan's Magazine</title>
<publisher><orgName ref="#Macmillan">Macmillan & Co.</orgName></publisher>
<pubPlace><placeName ref="#London">London</placeName></pubPlace>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey"><title>Macmillan's Magazine</title> was a monthly
literary periodical published <date from="1859" to="1907">from 1859 to
1907</date> by <persName ref="#MacmillanAlexander">Alexander
Macmillan.</persName> Its first editor was <persName ref="#MassonDavid"
>David Masson.</persName></note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="TempleBar">
<title>Temple Bar</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Athenaeum">
<title>The Athenaeum</title>
<note resp="ParkerJanice">The Athenaeum was a literary magazine published in
London, England from 1828 to 1921.</note>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Graphic">
<title>The Graphic</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Punch">
<title>Punch</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Frasers">
<title>Fraser's Magazine</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SaturdayReview">
<title>The Saturday Review</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SharpesLondonMag">
<title>Sharpe's London Magazine</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SundayTimes">
<title>The Sunday Times</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="NewMonthly">
<title>The New Monthly Magazine</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="SundayLibrary">
<title>The Sunday Library for Household Reading</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ManchesterExaminerTimes">
<title>The Manchester Examiner & Times</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ChambersLibraryForYoungPeople">
<title>Chambers's Library for Young People</title>
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Times">
<title>The Times</title>
<title>The London Times</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">The Times is a national British daily newspaper
based in <placeName ref="#London">London.</placeName> It has been printed under
its current name since <date when="1788">1788.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="RevueDesDeuxMondes">
<title xml:lang="fr">Revue Des Deux Mondes</title>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Revue Des Deux Mondes is a French language monthly
periodical based in <placeName ref="#Paris">Paris.</placeName> It has been in
print since <date when="1829">1829.</date></note></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="PathsofPeace">
<title>Paths of Peace</title>
<date when="1878"/>
<note resp="#JacobiKelsey">Paths of Peace was the Christmas special number of the
<title corresp="#SundayMagazine">Sunday Magazine.</title></note>
</bibl>
<!-- Works not by Craik -->
<bibl xml:id="NothingNew">
<title>Nothing New</title>
<!--UCLA10.11-->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HouseholdGods">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Saul">
<!-- Dorothy23 UCLA -->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="PhotographyInHotClimates">
<author>
<persName ref="#MulockBen">Benjamin Mulock</persName>
</author>
<!-- UCLADM14 --></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="ALegacy"><title>A Legacy: Being the Life and Remains of John Martin,
Schoolmaster and Poet </title><author ref="#DMC">Dinah Mulock Craik</author>
<date when="1878"/></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="HolidayAfloat"><title>Holiday Afloat</title><author ref="#DMC">Dinah
Mulock Craik</author>
<date when="1884"/>
<note resp="GivogueStevensonLecia">Holiday Afloat was published in <title
ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#GoodWords">Good Words</title> in 1884. It was
illustrated by <persName ref="CraikSiteIndex.xml#Margery">Margery
May</persName></note></bibl>
<!--KF: the following five entries are from Berg 19. Dinah read these as a publisher's reader for Macmillan c. 1860 but gave no context re: who they were by, if they were published, etc.-->
<bibl xml:id="Riverswood"><title level="m">The Master of
Riverswood</title><author><persName ref="#LewisArthur">Arthur
Lewis</persName></author></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="LittleGreyLady"
><!--KF: This could potentially be an alt title for the Moor Cottage, as one of the characters is referred to as a little grey lady.--></bibl>
<bibl xml:id="Leighs"/>
<bibl xml:id="QuiteProvidential"/>
<bibl xml:id="Sorrow"/>
<bibl xml:id="SultanCourt">
<title>Sultan Court</title>
<!-- Mentioned in Berg 22. Likely a poem by Christina Rossetti, but I could not confirm this. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="MothersInLaw">
<title>A Defense of Mothers-in-Law</title>
<!-- Mentioned in Berg 20. This title is found in Macmillan's November 1860 edition with no clear author. Kelsey Jacobi -->
</bibl>
<bibl xml:id="WomenAndWarriors"/>
<bibl xml:id="Samaratine">
<author><persName ref="#LeslieEliza">Miss Leslie</persName></author>
</bibl>
</listBibl>
</div>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>