Dorothy Boulger | |
---|---|
Born | 30 May 1846 (1846-05-30) Lambeth,Surrey |
Died | 22 July 1923 (1923-07-23) (aged 77) South Kensington, London, England |
Pen name | Theo Gift |
Occupation | Writer and novelist |
Subject | includes romances |
Signature | |
Dorothy Boulger born Dorothy Henrietta Havers and wrote under the name Theo Gift (30 May 1846 – 22 July 1923) was a British writer and novelist.
Life
Boulger was born in Lambeth, Surrey on 30 May 1846. She was one of four children born to Thomas Havers (1810–1870) of Thelton Hall, the family seat, Thelveton in Norfolk and his first wife Ellen Ruding. One of her sisters became the artist Alice Havers, who married the painter Frederick Morgan. Thomas occupied himself in company clerking and administration and in early 1854 accepted a post as a manager of the Falkland Islands Company in the Falkland Islands. He took his wife and children with him along with a governess, Mary Coppinger and a nurse.
The three sisters and brother were in the Falkland Islands until 1860. Their mother Ellen, died there in October 1854 about eight months after their arrival and Thomas remarried a year later in October 1855 to the governess, Mary Coppinger. In 1860 Thomas was relieved of his position in the Falklands and found a new post with new employers in Montevideo, relocating his family there. Upon Thomas' death in Montevideo in March 1870, his children by Ellen, now young adults and four younger children by Mary, all returned to England in April and May of the same year.
She began her writing for magazines in 1871, enjoying a two-year run of stories with Cassell's Family Magazine edited by the novelist G. Manville Fenn and a decade with the periodical All the Year Round edited by Charles Dickens Jr. She wrote her first novel, True to her Trust, or, Womanly Past Question which was a romance in 1874.
Her sister Alice Havers illustrated some of her stories. She wrote fiction with a heroine at the centre of the plot including her 1885 book "Lil Lorimer" which concerns a girl growing up in South America and it is thought to be based in part on her own life. Another two of her books are interesting because they are set in the Falkland Isles. Her story includes the alcoholism and over-enthusiastic missionaries but again the narrative revolves around heroic women. Her last book was dated 1901.
Boulger died in South Kensington, Middlesex on 22 July 1923.
Private life
She married George Simonds Boulger, a botanist, in 1879.
References
- ^ Flint, Kate. "Boulger [née Havers], Dorothy Henrietta [pseud. Theo Gift] (1847–1923), novelist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/55550. Retrieved 28 July 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Dictionary of Falkland Biography, 2012–17 David Tatham
- Newspaper reports 1854
- Falkland Island BMD records
- Newspaper Reports,Will and Probate
- shipping passenger records
- Boulger, Dorothy Henrietta (1874). True to her trust; or, 'Womanly past question' [by D.H. Boulger].
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Morgan, Alice Mary" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ^ Sutherland, John (1990). The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-1842-4.
- The Times, Friday, May 05, 1922; Issue 43023; pg. 18; col C — "The Times" Botanist. Death Of Professor G. S. Boulger.
External links
- Works by Dorothy Boulger at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Morgan, Alice Mary". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Categories:- 1846 births
- 1923 deaths
- People from Thelveton
- 19th-century British novelists
- 19th-century British women writers
- British women novelists
- 19th-century English novelists
- English women novelists
- Writers from the London Borough of Lambeth
- Pseudonymous women writers
- 19th-century pseudonymous writers
- Victorian women writers
- Victorian novelists
- 19th-century English short story writers
- English women short story writers
- Victorian short story writers