Francesca Maria Steele | |
---|---|
Born | Fanny Maria Steele 21 April 1848 Dalston, Hackney, London, England |
Died | 16 August 1931 Stroud, Gloucestershire, England | (aged 83)
Nationality | English |
Other names | Darley Dale |
Occupation(s) | Novelist and biographer |
Years active | 1878–1925 |
Known for | Biographies of saints |
Notable work | The convents of Great Britain and Ireland |
Francesca Maria Steele (21 April 1848 – 10 August 1931) was an English novelist, historian, and biographer, who began writing to support her family. She began her writing career with juvenile fiction; she later moved into adult fiction, using the pseudonym Darley Dale for her fiction writing. Intensely religious, she converted to Roman Catholicism in 1887 and later wrote several books on religious topics.
Steele was born in London on 21 April 1848.[1][2][3][note 1] Her parents were Robert Peter Steele (1816 – 10 May 1884),[4] the secretary of the Royal Assurance Company and Frances Mary Francis (8 February 1818 – 3 October 1902).[5]
Steele was educated at Bedford College, London,[6] the first higher education college for women in the United Kingdom. Steele lived in Jersey from 1874 to 1884.[7] She began writing in Jersey, with The Jersey Boys in 1878. Her father died on 10 May 1884,[4] and his pension died with him. He had lost everything else in a bank collapse, so Steele's mother was now dependent on what Steele could earn from her writing.[7]
Steele moved to Gloucestershire with her mother and sisters. Steele and her sister Alice Mary (1856 – c. 1935) converted to Roman Catholicism in 1877.[8] Alice went on to become a nun and was the sister in charge at Tyburn Convent at 6 Hyde Park Place, in London at the time of the 1911 census. Alice was still in charge there twenty years later when Steele died.[9]
Steele had already moved to Loretto House at Stroud in Gloucestershire when her mother died there on 3 October 1902.[5] She was still there nearly thirty years later when she died.[6][10] Even after her mother died, Steele was still supporting her youngest sister, Emma Caroline, when she applied to the Royal Literary Fund in 1914.
Steele was registered at birth and baptised as Fanny Maria Steele, and she used this name up until the 1891 census. By the 1901 census she was using the name Florence Steel, but soon changed to Francesca Maria Steele. She used this name for the publication of The Convents of Great Britain in 1902. In the 1911 Census, she used that form of her name also, and continued to do so. For her writing, she used the pseudonym Darley Dale for all of her fiction, but used her real name for her writing on religious topics.[11]
Steele's work can be divided into three types:
The sources for the table are:
There seem to be no works by Steele at Project Gutenberg, so the table indicated those cases where online versions of the texts are available.
No | Year | Title | Illustrator | Type | Publisher | Pages | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1878 | The Jersey Boys | juv. | RTS, London | [note 3] | ||
2 | 1879 | Helen Leslie; or, "A Little Leaven" | juv. | Frederick Warne & Co, London | 192 pages, (8º) | [note 4] | |
3 | 1880 | A Tearful Victory. A story for children | juv. | SPCK, London | 128 pages, (8º) | ||
4 | 1881 | The black donkey; or, The Guernsey boys | juv. | SPCK, London | cm.16 | ||
5 | 1882 | Little Bricks | juv. | James Nisbet & Co, London | 231 pages, (8º) | [note 5][13] | |
6 | 1882 | The Family Failing | juv. | Blackie & Son, London | 221 pages, (8º) | [note 6][13][14] | |
7 | 1882 | Cissy's Troubles | juv. | James Nisbet & Co, London | 233 pages, (8º) | [note 7] | |
8 | 1883 | Spoilt Guy | juv. | James Nisbet & Co, London | cm.18 | [note 5][13] | |
9 | 1884 | Seven sons; or, The story of Malcolm and his brothers | juv. | James Nisbet & Co, London | cm.18 | ||
10 | 1885 | Fanny's king: and other stories | juv. | Blackie & Son, London | 64 p., [1] leaf of plates, ill., 15.2 cm. | ||
11 | 1885 | The wild marsh-marigolds | juv. | London | cm.15 | ||
12 | 1885 | The great auk's eggs | Charles Whymper | juv. | RTS, London | 158,[2]p., [1] leaf of plates, ill., 18 cm. | [note 7] |
13 | 1886 | Oughts and Crosses: or, Mr. Holland's conquest | juv. | J. Nisbet & Co, London | 269 pages, (8º) | ||
14 | 1886 | Fair Katherine | adt. | Hurst & Blackett, London | 3 volumes, (8º) | ||
15 | 1886 | Swallow-tails and skippers | Lucy Francis | juv. | RTS, London | 158 p., 1 col. ill., 19 cm. | [note 8][13] |
16 | 1887 | The glory of the sea | juv. | RTS, London | cm.18 | ||
17 | 1887 | The Shepherd's Fairy: a pastorale | juv. | RTS, London | 208 pages, (8º) | [note 7] | |
18 | 1889 | Mr. Mygale's Hobby: a story about spiders | Charles Whymper | juv. | RTS, London | 192 pages, (8º) | [note 8][13] |
19 | 1890 | Noah's ark: a tale of the Norfolk Broads | Paul Hardy | juv. | Frederick Warne and Co, London | 280, [8] p., ill., 20 cm. | |
20 | 1892 | The little doctor: or, The magic of nature | Alexander Monro | juv. | Wells Gardner, Darton & Co, London | 209, [7] p., ill., 20 cm. | |
21 | 1892 | The Village Blacksmith | adt. | Hutchinson & Co, London | 3 volumes, (8º) | [note 9][15][16][17] | |
22 | 1893 | Lottie's wooing, by Darley Dale | adt. | Hutchinson & Co, London | 3 vols. cm.19 | [note 9][18][19][20] | |
23 | 1894 | The Game of Life. A novel | adt. | Hutchinson & Co, London | 3 volumes, (8º) | ||
24 | 1896 | Willy's Flower. | juv. | Blackie & Son, London | 16 pages, (16º) | [note 10] | |
25 | 1896 | A Modern Comedy of Errors | adt. | [note 11] | |||
26 | 1897 | Stella's story: a Venetian tale | Paul Woodroffe | juv. | J. S. Virtue and Co, London | 248 p., 8 ill., 20 cm. | [note 9][21] |
27 | 1897 | Chloe | adt. | Bliss, Sands & Co, London | 352 pages, (8º) | [note 9][22] | |
28 | 1898 | Cupid's Crooked Ways | adt. | [note 12][23] | |||
29 | 1899 | Justice Meadows: or the Golden Tree of Knowledge | adt. | [note 13][24] | |||
30 | 1902 | The convents of Great Britain | rel. | Sands & Co, London | xxv, 320 pages, 25 leaves of plates, portraits (black and white), 19 cm | [note 5][13] | |
31 | 1902 | The Daughters of Job | adt. | R. A. Everett & Co, London | 390 pages, (8º) | ||
32 | 1902 | Monasteries and Religious House of Great Britain and Ireland. With an appendix on the religious houses in America | rel. | R. & T. Washbourne, London | xv, 267 pages, (8º) | [note 5][13] | |
33 | 1903 | The House that Jack built | adt. | R. A. Everett & Co, London | 313 pages, (8º) | ||
34 | 1903 | Anchoresses of the West | rel. | Sands & Co, London | xxii, 261 pages, (8º) | ||
35 | 1903 | The Flighty Duchess | adt. | [note 14] | |||
36 | 1904 | Brother Francis. A novel | adt. | R. A. Everett & Co, London | 316 pages, (8º) | ||
37 | 1905 | The Mirror of St. Edmund. Done into modern English. | rel. | Burns & Oates, London | x, 80 pages, (16º) | [note 5][13] | |
38 | 1907 | Naomi's transgression | adt. | Frederick Warne and Co, London | vi, 306, [6] p., [6] l. of plates, ill., 20 cm. | [note 15] | |
39 | 1908 | The story of the English Pope | rel. | Macdonald and Evans, London | 177 p, col. ill, 17 cm. | [note 16] | |
40 | 1909 | St. Bridget of Sweden | rel. | R. & T. Washbourne, London | xxviii, 140 p., frontis., 8º. | [note 8][13] | |
41 | 1910 | The story of the Bridgettines | rel. | R. & T. Washbourne, London | 19 cm. | ||
42 | 1910 | The Beautiful Queen, Joanna I. of Naples | rel. | Hutchinson & Co, London | vii, 347 pages, (8º) | ||
43 | 1914 | The life and visions of St. Hildegarde | rel. | Heath Cranton, London | xiv, 246 p., frontis., 19 cm. | ||
44 | 1921 | The Life of Saint Walburga | rel. | Heath Cranton, London | 189 pages, (8º) | [note 5][13] | |
45 | 1922 | Old Mrs. Graham | adt. | Hutchinson & Co, London | 286 p., 8º. | ||
46 | 1923 | The Master of the House | adt. | Heath Cranton, London | 290 p., C | ||
47 | 1925 | The convents of Great Britain and Ireland | rel. | London | 8º. | [note 7] | |
48 | 1928 | The Little Widow, 2nd edition | adt. | [note 3] |
The following four illustrations by AFB were produced for The Family Failing (1883) by Steele (courtesy of The British Library)[14] Typically, at the time, when it came to novels, only juvenile fiction was illustrated, although serial stories were often illustrated, even if they were for adults.
At the time of the 1911 Census, Steele was living with her sister Emma Caroline at Loretto House in Stroud. Whatever income she had from her writing, it was obviously not enough as she applied for assistance from the Royal Literary Fund in 1914.[7] In her later years, Steele was an invalid. She died on 16 August 1931, leaving a relatively modest estate of less than £400.[10] Her sister Emma Caroline was her executor, and only survived her sister by four years, dying on 9 December 1935.[25]