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CraikSiteIndex.xml
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CraikSiteIndex.xml
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xml-model href="http://www.tei-c.org/release/xml/tei/custom/schema/relaxng/tei_all.rng" type="application/xml" schematypens="http://relaxng.org/ns/structure/1.0"?>
<?xml-model href="http://www.tei-c.org/release/xml/tei/custom/schema/relaxng/tei_all.rng" type="application/xml"
schematypens="http://purl.oclc.org/dsdl/schematron"?>
<?xml-model href="Schematron/SiteIndexCheck.sch" type="application/xml" schematypens="http://purl.oclc.org/dsdl/schematron"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
<teiHeader>
<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, placeography, orgography, and bibliography has been populated from the letters of Dinah Craik. Information about
each person comes from Craik's correspondence, the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, or other documented sources.</p>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<encodingDesc>
<editorialDecl xml:id="CraikEditorialDeclaration">
<p>Our aim in this edition has been to transcribe the content of Dinah Craik's letters as accurately as possible without reproducing the
physical appearance of the manuscript. We have not transcribed or encoded notes written on the letters by archivists, cataloguers, or
other library staff.</p>
<p>Craik’s spelling, punctuation, underlining, abbreviations, additions and deletions are retained. We have silently emended the long s,
superscripted abbreviations, the nineteenth-century shorthands for would, could, should, and which, and words which are hyphenated at
the end of a line. Where Craik uses a non-standard spelling, we have encoded both her spelling and the standard Oxford English
Dictionary spelling to facilitate searching.</p>
<p>This digital edition adopts the @when-custom attribute for encoding partial dates in Dinah Craik's letters. This customization is
almost identical to the TEI's att.datable.w3c attribute, with the exception of its cyclical implications. In this edition, the
attribute @when-custom="--MM-DD" signifies "some DD of MM" instead of "every DD of MM." This customization allows our editors to encode
dates where Craik wrote the exact month and day but not the year.</p>
<p/>
</editorialDecl>
</encodingDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="DigitalCraikTeam">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="AndersonHannah">
<persName>
<surname>Anderson</surname>
<forename>Hannah</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-01">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="BennettAlyson">
<persName>
<surname>Bennett</surname>
<forename>Alyson</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-07">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Alyson Bennett is a genealogist contributing to the identification of historical people referenced in Craik's
letters.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BourrierKaren">
<persName>
<surname>Bourrier</surname>
<forename>Karen</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Project Director</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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="EhnesCaley">
<persName>
<surname>Ehnes</surname>
<forename>Caley</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>College of the Rockies</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Caley Ehnes is a member of the Faculty of English at the College of the Rockies.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="FukushimaKailey">
<persName>
<surname>Fukushima</surname>
<forename>Kailey</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-08">Editor</occupation>
<occupation from="2016-05" to="2017-08">Project Manager</occupation>
<occupation from="2015-05" to="2016-05">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Kailey Fukushima is a Master's Student at the University of Victoria. She holds a BA (Hons) in English from the
University of Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HingstonKyleeAnne">
<persName>
<surname>Hingston</surname>
<forename>Kylee-Anne</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>St. Thomas More College</affiliation>
<affiliation>University of Saskatchewan</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Kylee-Anne Hingston is a term lecturer in the English Department at St. Thomas More College in Saskatoon</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="HurrellChristie">
<persName>
<surname>Hurrell</surname>
<forename>Christie</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-06">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Christie Hurrell is the Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communication Librarian at the University of
Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="JarmulaSonia">
<persName>
<surname>Jarmula</surname>
<forename>Sonia</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2018-05">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Sonia Jarmula is a Master's Student at the University of Calgary. She holds a BA (Hons) in English from the
University of Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="LudlowElizabeth">
<persName>
<surname>Ludlow</surname>
<forename>Elizabeth</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>Anglia Ruskin University</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Elizabeth Ludlow is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK. She is the
author of <title>Christina Rossetti and the Bible: Waiting with the Saints</title> (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014). Her
current research project considers prayer and the female body in Victorian women’s writing.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="ParkerJanice">
<persName>
<surname>Parker</surname>
<forename>Janice</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Janice Parker is a PhD student at the University of Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="StewartLindsey">
<persName>
<surname>Stewart</surname>
<forename>Lindsey</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>Open University</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Dr Lindsey Stewart has recently been awarded her doctorate from the Open University. This examined the
nineteenth-century psychiatric idea of monomania in medical and literary discourse, and included an examination of Dinah Craik’s
‘The Double House’ (1857). Her research interests are the intersections between literature and medicine, most particularly
nineteenth-century ideas of addiction.</note>
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="PastEditors">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="AlemanKeilaKarinne">
<persName>
<surname>Aleman</surname>
<forename>Keila Karinne</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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="BestWill">
<persName>
<surname>Best</surname>
<forename>Will</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="CarterJaclyn">
<persName>
<surname>Carter</surname>
<forename>Jaclyn</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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="EllsworthAaron">
<persName>
<surname>Ellsworth</surname>
<forename>Aaron</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<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="FoxKerryLeigh">
<persName>
<surname>Fox</surname>
<forename>Kerry-Leigh</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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="GivogueStevensonLecia">
<persName>
<surname>Givogue Stevenson</surname>
<forename>Lecia</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-01" to="2017-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="JacobiKelsey">
<persName>
<surname>Jacobi</surname>
<forename>Kelsey</forename>
<roleName>Editor</roleName>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-01" to="2017-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="KentSarah">
<persName>
<surname>Kent</surname>
<forename>Sarah</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
</person>
<person xml:id="RahmanZainub">
<persName>
<surname>Rahman</surname>
<forename>Zainub</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<note type="bio">Rahman Zainub is an MA student at the University of Calgary.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="RuddyPippa">
<persName>
<surname>Ruddy</surname>
<forename>Pippa</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2015-01" to="2015-04">Editor</occupation>
<affiliation>University of Calgary</affiliation>
<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="WyattBronwyn">
<persName>
<surname>Wyatt</surname>
<forename>Bronwyn</forename>
</persName>
<occupation from="2017-03" to="2017-04">Contributor</occupation>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">Bronwyn Wyatt is Kylee-Anne Hingston's sister. She helped transcribe one of Dinah Craik's letters in
April 2017.</note>
</person>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="Pets">
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="Blackie" sex="U">
<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="Christopher" sex="M">
<persName>Christopher</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">Christopher was one of Dinah's cats from her time at <placeName ref="#Wildwood"
>Wildwood.</placeName>
</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="#Lynover">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>
<person xml:id="Kate" sex="F">
<persName>Kate</persName>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Kate</persName> was one of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> carriage horses.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Lotus" sex="U">
<persName>
<forename>Lotus</forename>
</persName>
<note resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Lotus</persName> was one of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s cats at <placeName ref="#Wildwood"
>Wildwood.</placeName>
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Nell" sex="M">
<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="#Lynover">Lynover
Cottage.</placeName> She was a Cochin hen given to <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> as a present.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="Pixie" sex="U">
<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" sex="U">
<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>
</listPerson>
</div>
<div type="HistoricalPeople">
<head>Historical People</head>
<listPerson>
<person xml:id="AbrahamPhilip" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Abraham</surname>
<forename>Philip</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1803"/>
<death when="1890-12-18"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>English</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="AdderleyCharles" sex="M">
<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="AddeyHenryMarkinfield" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Addey</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
<forename>Markinfield</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1910"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<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="AingerAlfred" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Ainger</surname>
<forename>Alfred</forename>
<addName>Doubleday</addName>
<roleName>Canon</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1837-02-09"/>
<death when="1904-02-08"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Clergy</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Alfred Ainger</persName> published <title>"Books and their uses"</title> in <title ref="#MacmillansMagazine"
>Macmillan's Magazine</title> in <date when="1859">1859</date>, and in <date when="1887">1887</date> he was named Canon of
<placeName ref="#Bristol">Bristol</placeName>. In <date when="1896">1896</date> he was appointed chaplain-in-ordinary to
<persName ref="#QueenVictoria">Queen Victoria</persName>. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AldenHenry" sex="M">
<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="AlexanderMrsCF" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Alexander</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Humphreys</surname>
<forename>Cecil</forename>
<forename>Frances</forename>
<addName>Fanny</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1818"/>
<death when="1895-10-12"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Cecil Frances Alexander</persName> was a hymn writer and poet who was prominent in the <orgName>Church of Ireland
Hymnal</orgName>. In <date when="1896">1896</date> a posthumous collection <title>Poems by <persName>Cecil Frances
Alexander</persName>
</title> was published.<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AllinghamHelen" sex="F">
<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="M">
<persName>
<surname>Allingham</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1824"/>
<death when="1889"/>
<occupation>Writer</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="AllonHenry" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Allon</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1818-10-13"/>
<death when="1892-04-16"/>
<occupation>Clergy</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Henry Allon</persName> was a clergyman with a large and distinguished congregation, and wrote and reviewed for multiple
literary journals. He also edited <title>The British Quarterly Review</title>. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersenHansChristian" sex="M">
<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 The Ugly Duckling.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonAlexander" sex="M">
<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="AndersonHelen" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname>Anderson</surname>
<forename>Helen</forename>
</persName>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Helen</persName> was the sister of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName>'s friend <persName ref="#MrAnderson">Mr.
Anderson</persName>. </note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonMary" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Anderson</surname>
<surname type="married">Marshall</surname>
<forename>Mary</forename>
<forename>Adamson</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1837-01-17"/>
<death when="1910-08-08"/>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<occupation>Doctor</occupation>
<nationality>Scottish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Mary Adamson Anderson</persName> was a member of <orgName>the Edinburgh Seven,</orgName> a group of women who submitted
an <date when="1870">1870</date> petition for admission to <orgName>The Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.</orgName> She passed her MD
examination in <date when="1879">1879,</date> and was senior physician at <orgName>New Hospital</orgName>. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AndersonRobert" sex="M">
<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="AndersonStewart" sex="M">
<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="Annie" sex="F">
<persName>
<forename>Annie</forename>
</persName>
<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="Arnold" sex="M">
<persName>
<forename>Arnold</forename>
</persName>
<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="ArnoldMatthew" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Arnold</surname>
<forename>Matthew</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1822-12-24"/>
<death when="1888-04-15"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Matthew Arnold</persName> was a poet and a Professor of Poetry at <orgName ref="#UniversityOfOxford">Oxford</orgName>,
as well as a literary, social, and religious critic. He had a reputation as a literary and social controversialist.
<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AustinAlfred" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Austin</surname>
<forename>Alfred</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1835-05-30"/>
<death when="1913-06-02"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<residence>
<placeName ref="#SwinfordHouse">Swinford House</placeName>
</residence>
<note type="bio" resp="#BourrierKaren #AndersonHannah #FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Alfred Austin</persName> was the husband of Dinah's distant cousin Hester Jane Austin, and a frequent contributor to
<title corresp="#MacmillansMagazine">Macmillan's Magazine</title>. A novelist, dramatist and poet, he was appointed poet
laureate in <date when="1896">1896</date>
<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="AustinHesterJane" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname type="maiden">Mulock</surname>
<surname type="married">Austin</surname>
<forename>Hester</forename>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1842-11-16"/>
<death when="1929-09"/>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>Anglo-Irish</nationality>
<residence>
<placeName ref="#SwinfordHouse">Swinford House</placeName>
</residence>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Hester Jane Austin</persName> was a distant cousin of <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> on <persName
ref="#MulockThomas">her father</persName>'s side. Her father was <persName>Thomas Homan-Mulock.</persName> She was also a
poet.<lb/>Edmund Bewley, The Family of Mulock (Dublin: Privately Printed, 1905), 22-24.<lb/>
<!--Ancestry-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BackhouseDinah" sex="F">
<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="Baleson" sex="F">
<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="BarnesAlfredSmith" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Barnes</surname>
<forename>Alfred</forename>
<forename>Smith</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1817-01-28"/>
<death when="1888-02-17"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Alfred Smith Barnes</persName> founded <orgName>A.S. Barnes & Co.</orgName>, which primarily published text books.
He managed the company until his retirement in <date when="1880">1880.</date>
<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarnesFrederick" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Barnes</surname>
<forename>Frederick</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Actor</occupation>
<note type="bio">Frederick Barnes was the husband of Lily Barnes, who committed suicide.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarnesHenry" sex="M">
<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 International Review from 1874 to 1879, and a partner in
his father's A. S. Barnes publishing firm.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BarrettWilson" sex="M">
<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="BarrySarah" sex="F">
<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>
<residence>
<placeName ref="#ClockHouseBeckenham">The Clock House</placeName>
</residence>
<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="M">
<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>Trades</occupation>
<residence>
<placeName ref="#ClockHouseBeckenham">The Clock House</placeName>
</residence>
<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="BaynePeter" sex="M">
<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="BeeslyEmily" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname type="married">Beesley</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Crompton</surname>
<forename>Emily</forename>
</persName>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<note resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Emily Beesley</persName> was the president of the women's liberal association of <placeName ref="#Paddington"
>Paddington</placeName>, wrote new lyrics for <title>The Wearing of the Green</title>, and wrote <title>Stories from the
History of Rome</title> for her four sons. <lb/>ODNB.<!--HA: In husband's entry.--></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BehrensAnna" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname>Behrens</surname>
<forename>Hanna</forename>
<addName>Anna</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829"/>
<death when="1904"/>
<occupation>Social Reformer</occupation>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>German</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Anna</persName> was the second daughter of <persName>Solomon Levi Behrens</persName>. <orgName>The Behrens</orgName>
were German-Jewish immigrants who were well-known for their contributions to the Jewish community of <placeName ref="#Manchester"
>Manchester</placeName>. They were also friends with <persName ref="#GaskellElizabeth">Elizabeth Gaskell</persName> and her
family. <lb/>Irene Wiltshire, ed., "Margaret Emily Gaskell," Letters of Mrs. Gaskell's Daughters, 1856–1914 (Humanities-Ebooks
LLP, 2011), 155, n.1.; 156, n.1.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BellGeorge" sex="M">
<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="BenhamWilliam" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Benham</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1831-01-15"/>
<death when="1910-07-30"/>
<occupation>Clergy</occupation>
<occupation>Writer</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>William Benham</persName> was Divinity tutor and lecturer in English Literature at <orgName>St. Mark's</orgName>,
<placeName>Chelsea</placeName> until <date when="1858">1858</date>. He lectured on Church History and <persName
ref="#DickensCharles">Charles Dickens</persName> at the Church Institute in <placeName ref="#Canterbury"
>Canterbury</placeName>. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BeniciaBoy" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Heenan</surname>
<forename>John</forename>
<forename>Carmel</forename>
<addName>Benicia Boy</addName>
</persName>
<birth when="1835-05-02"/>
<death when="1873-10"/>
<occupation>Trades</occupation>
<nationality>American</nationality>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>John Carmel Heenan, a.k.a. the Benicia Boy</persName> was a famous Irish-American prizefighter (bare-knuckle boxer). On
<date when="1860-04-17">17 April 1860</date>, <persName>Heenan</persName> and the reigning English champion <persName
ref="#SayersTom">Tom Sayers</persName> fought thirty-seven rounds at a ring in <placeName>Farnborough</placeName>. After the
thirty-seventh, the enraged spectators broke into the ring and the fight was declared a draw. Boxing was banned in <placeName
ref="#England">England</placeName> at the time, and yet the fight was well-attended by people of many classes.<lb/>ANB.
<lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BensonEdward" sex="M">
<persName>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>White</forename>
<surname>Benson</surname>
<roleName>Archbishop</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1829"/>
<death when="1896"/>
<occupation>Clergy</occupation>
<note type="bio">
<persName>Edward Benson</persName> was the Archbishop of Canterbury <date from="1883" to="1896">from 1829 to 1896</date>.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BensonJane" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname>Benson</surname>
<forename>Jane</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1825"/>
<death when="1897-06-16"/>
<occupation>Education</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="BentleyEdward" sex="M">
<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="M">
<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="M">
<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="BewleyEdmund" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Bewley</surname>
<forename>Edmund</forename>
<forename>Thomas</forename>
<roleName>Sir</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1837-01-11"/>
<death when="1910-07-30"/>
<occupation>Education</occupation>
<nationality>Irish</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#AndersonHannah">
<persName>Sir Edmund Thomas Bewley</persName> was a lawyer and genealogist, and Professor of Feudal and English Law at
<orgName>the University of Dublin</orgName>. He was <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah's</persName> relative, and wrote a family
history book called <title>The Family of Mulock</title>. <lb/>ODNB.</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BewleyMay" sex="F">
<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="BewleyNed" sex="M">
<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="BickerstethEdwardHenry">
<persName>
<forename>Edward</forename>
<forename>Henry</forename>
<surname>Bickersteth</surname>
<roleName>Reverend</roleName>
</persName>
<birth when="1825"/>
<death when="1906"/>
<occupation>Clergy</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note resp="#BourrierKaren">The Rev E. H. Bickersteth became the vicar of Christ Church, <placeName ref="#HampsteadHeath"
>Hampstead</placeName>, in <date when="1855">1855</date>; he remained there for thirty years. ODNB</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackettHarriet" sex="F">
<persName>
<surname type="married">James</surname>
<surname type="maiden">Blackett</surname>
<forename>Harriet</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1829-03-02"/>
<death/>
<occupation>Gentlewoman</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey">
<persName>Harriet</persName> was the younger sister of the publisher <persName ref="#BlackettHenry">Henry Blackett</persName> and
the middle child of <orgName>the Blackett family</orgName>. She lived with <rs type="person" ref="#BlackettHenry">her
brother</rs> and <orgName>his family</orgName> for some time when she was suffering from unspecified mental health issues. <lb/>
<!--Ancestry-->
</note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackettHenry" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Blackett</surname>
<forename>Henry</forename>
</persName>
<birth when="1825-05-26"/>
<death when="1871-03-07"/>
<occupation>Publisher</occupation>
<nationality>English</nationality>
<note type="bio" resp="#FukushimaKailey"><persName>Henry Blackett</persName> was one of the proprietors of the publishing firm
<orgName ref="#HurstBlackett">Hurst & Blackett</orgName>. He and <persName ref="#DMC">Dinah</persName> were personal and
professional acquaintances.<lb/></note>
</person>
<person xml:id="BlackWilliam" sex="M">
<persName>
<surname>Black</surname>
<forename>William</forename>
</persName>