Evelyn Ward Everett-Green (17 November 1856 in London – 23 April 1932 in Funchal) was an English novelist who started with improving, pious stories for children, moved on to historical fiction for older girls, and then turned to adult romantic fiction.
She wrote about 350 books, more than 200 of them under her own name, and others using the pseudonyms H. F. E., Cecil Adair, E. Ward and Evelyn Dare.
Early life and work
Evelyn was born at 7 Upper
Gower Street, London
Gower Street is a two-way street in Bloomsbury, central London, running from Euston Road at the north to Montague Place in the south. The street is continued from North Gower Street north of Euston Road. To the south, it becomes Bloomsbury ...
. Her mother was a historian,
Mary Anne Everett Green
Mary Anne Everett Green ( Wood; 19 July 1818 – 1 November 1895) was an English historian. After establishing a reputation for scholarship with two multi-volume books on royal ladies and noblewomen, she was invited to assist in preparing cale ...
(née Wood), and her father, George Pycock Green, a portrait and landscape painter. The family were
Methodists. She was the second of the family's three surviving daughters and had an older brother.
She was baptised at
Great Queen Street
Great Queen Street is a street in the West End of central London in England. It is a continuation of Long Acre from Drury Lane to Kingsway. It runs from 1 to 44 along the north side, east to west, and 45 to about 80 along the south side, wes ...
Wesleyan Methodist Chapel on 22 February 1857 as Eveline, but changed her name to Evelyn in later life. Like the rest of her family, she added Everett to her surname in honour of George Green's friend the
Wesleyan
Wesleyan theology, otherwise known as Wesleyan– Arminian theology, or Methodist theology, is a theological tradition in Protestant Christianity based upon the ministry of the 18th-century evangelical reformer brothers John Wesley and Charle ...
historian
James Everett
James Everett (14 February 1890 – 18 December 1967) was an Irish Labour Party politician who served as Minister for Justice from 1954 to 1957, Minister for Posts and Telegraphs from 1948 to 1951 and Leader of the National Labour Party from ...
.
From earliest childhood, Evelyn invented stories to tell her sisters. She was educated at home until the age of 12, then at
Gower Street Preparatory School, where she wrote a historical tale about
Lady Jane Grey. Next came a year at
Bedford College, London on a Reid scholarship (1872–1873),
[Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy: ''The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present Day'' (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 349.] during which she wrote ''Tom's Tempest Victory'', her first novel. She continued to write while studying at the
London Academy of Music. She also worked as a nurse in a London hospital for two years.
Her brother's death in 1876 ended plans to go to
India
India, officially the Republic of India (Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the seventh-largest country by area, the second-most populous country, and the most populous democracy in the world. Bounded by the Indian Ocean on the so ...
with him. She occupied herself with good works, including
Sunday School teaching and nursing, and later hospital nursing.
Writing career
In 1880 ''Tom Tempest's Victory'' became her first published work, under the pseudonym H. F. E.
Though it was soon followed by other works, she found writing at home difficult and town winters unhealthy for her. In 1881 she was still living in Gower Street with her family, but in 1883 she moved outside
London
London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
with Catherine Mainwaring Sladen. In the 1890s and early 1900s they had homes in
Albury, Surrey
Albury is a village and civil parish in the borough of Guildford in Surrey, England, about south-east of Guildford town centre. The village is within the Surrey Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Farley Green, Little London and adjace ...
. At the time of the 1891 England Census, however, she and Catherine were currently visiting her family at Gower Street.
While in Albury, Everett-Green wrote numerous historical novels and somewhat fewer moral tales for the
Religious Tract Society
The Religious Tract Society was a British evangelical Christian organization founded in 1799 and known for publishing a variety of popular religious and quasi-religious texts in the 19th century. The society engaged in charity as well as commerci ...
. Her novel about
Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc (french: link=yes, Jeanne d'Arc, translit= an daʁk} ; 1412 – 30 May 1431) is a patron saint of France, honored as a defender of the French nation for her role in the siege of Orléans and her insistence on the coronat ...
entitled ''Called of Her Country'' (1903), later republished as ''A Heroine of France'', presents Joan as a feminine "Angelic Maid" in white armour, whose inspiring adventures were undertaken in a dutiful spirit. Many of her works have been dismissed by critics as apologies for an oppressive order. The girls' historical romance genre is viewed by such critics as a validation of "traditional", restrictive, domestic-oriented versions of femininity by showing they had long-established historical precedents.
Much of Everett-Green's fiction and non-fiction was meant for girls, but she also wrote boys' adventure stories such as ''A Gordon Highlander'' (1901). Many of her books followed values and themes learnt during her Methodist upbringing. These are clearest in her books targeting children in general. She soon turned to novels for slightly older girls, the genre she is best remembered for. They generally followed development in a household from childhood to adulthood. Careers for women were mentioned without disapproval, but the endings invariably featured marriage for the female heroines.
Contemporary critics, such as one from the ''Chicago Daily Tribune,'' said the works were written with "obvious good intention", but the "day of the weepy, fainting, blue-eyed... heroine has vanished." Between 1890 and 1909 she wrote about 50 historical tales before moving to Madeira.
Thereafter she wrote romantic novels for adults, often under the pseudonym Cecil Adair. According to a modern critic, "Family sagas or romances with a historical adventure setting were her speciality."
Contemporary readers enjoyed these for their chaste sensationalism and they had considerable success.
She occasionally collaborated with fellow authors Louisa Bedford and Emma and Beatrice Marshall.
Evelyn's works were some of the most popular of her generation. She was one of the bestselling authors with her publisher, Stanley Paul.
However, while popular enough to bring in adequate income, they lack real distinction and are now generally read for the light they shed on social backgrounds.
Later life and death
In the 1911 census, Everett-Green, with several servants, is recorded as still living at Albury with Catherine, as "joint heads" of the household. In that year, however, Evelyn and Catherine moved abroad and eventually settled in Quinta Pico de São João,
Madeira. However, during the First World War they both lived at Battramsley near Lymington, Hampshire.
She and Catherine remained there, financially independent and unmarried.
Dominic James has suggested their partnership may have been a romantic one, in line with the same-sex relationship Everett-Green outlined in ''Fast friends; or, David and Jonathan'' (1882), which was published under a pseudonym.
Evelyn returned to England each year to visit her sister Gertrude and do business with her publishers. She became an active member of the Anglican community in Madeira and was buried in the British Cemetery. There is a memorial plaque on the interior south wall of the English Holy Trinity Church, Funchal.
She left a fortune of £5,657. 9s 3d, with the classical scholar
A. S. F. Gow administering her will.
Later reception
An extract from ''The Mistress of Lydgate Priory'' (1885): "For a time I was afraid of her, with that fear that is not unwholesome in the young and has a fascination of its own. I liked to see her come into my room, and was sorry when she left. I liked to watch her from my window as she paced in her stately way to and fro upon the terrace.... My grandmother was herself a reserved and silent woman; moreover, she was imbued with a sound and practical common sense that I have never seen equalled, and which gave her a power and discernment rarely to be met with. Every one came to her for advice, as it seemed to me; and seldom did they go away without having received just such counsel as they most needed. The confidence she inspired was something marvellous, as was the deep and true veneration with which all regarded her."
The figure represented in this extract exemplifies the recurring theme of a stern and authoritative matriarch seen in the eyes of an adoring and respectful young woman. This theme has led critics to accuse Everett-Green of apologizing for an oppressive order. Indeed her status as a writer for the juvenile female market has led to her works being lumped together as conservative and reactionary by critics such as Kimberley Reynolds. This reading of them became problematic in the 20th century. The idea of girls' literature enforcing traditional forms of femininity comes from later commentators such as E. J. Salmon. This has led to a perception that all literature of this kind was reactionary and conservative.
Hillary Skelding has argued that Everett-Green's historical works maintain a high degree of historical accuracy, due to her mother's background as a historian and other female historians of the era. Some of her narratives focus on the unexceptional, everyday women of history who often acknowledge such domestic authority. She depicts in her fictional mothers and wives greater shrewdness and cleverness than her male counterparts did.
Conversely, Kimberley Reynolds has noted that some such characters are powerful only within the domestic sphere and do not change the conventional patriarchal order. In effect, she only offers the illusion of female empowerment by limiting it to the domestic sphere.
Selected works
*''The Doctor's Dozen'' (1880)
*''Fast friends; or, David and Jonathan'' (1882) (as H. F. E.)
*''Curthbert Conningsby'' (1884)
*''Torwood's Trust'' (1884)
*''Her Husband's Home; or The Durleys of Linley Castle'' (1885)
*''Monica'' (1889)
*''Mrs. Romaine's Household'' (1891)
*''The Lord of Dynevor: A Tale of the Times of Edward the First'' (1892)
*''In the Days of Chivalry: A Tale of the Times of the Black Prince'' (1893)
*''The Church and the King, a tale of England in the days of Henry VIII'' (1893)
*''Maud Melville's marriage: a story of the seventeenth century'' (1893)
*''Sir Aylmer's Heir; a Story for the Young'' (1894)
*''The Secret Chamber at Chad'' (1894)
*''The Lost Treasure of Trevlyn: A Story of the Days of the Gunpowder Plot'' (1894)
*''Shut in: a Tale of the wonderful Siege of Antwerp in the year 1585'' (1895)
*''Judith: The Money-lender's Daughter'' (1896)
*''In Taunton town a story of the rebellion of James Duke of Monmouth in 1685'' (1896)
*''Olive Roscoe, or, The new sister'' (1896)
*''Squib and His Friends'' (1897)
*''Molly Melville: A tale for girls'' (1897)
*''Tom Tufton's Travels'' (1898)
*''A Clerk of Oxford, and His Adventures in the Baron's War'' (1898)
*''French and English: A Story of the Struggle in America'' (1899)
*''Shimmering Waters'' (1900) (as Cecil Adair)
*''Barbara's Brothers'' (1900)
*''The Heir of Hascombe hall; a tale of the days of the early Tudors'' (1900)
*''Esther's Charge: a story for girls'' (1900)
*''Eustace Marchmont: a Friend of the People'' (1900)
*''Miss Uraca'' (1900)
*''Our Winnie and The Little Match-Girl'' (1900)
*''In the Wars of the Roses: A Story for the Young'' (1901)
*''True Stories of Girl Heroines'' (1901)
*''In the Days of Chivalry; a tale of the Times of the Black Prince'' (1901)
*''In Fair Granada: a Tale of Moors and Christians'' (1902)
*''Gabriel Garth, Chartist'' (1902)
*''The Niece of Esther Lunne'' (1903)
*''A hero of the Highlands: or, The romance of a rebellion, as related by one who looked on'' (1903)
*''Ringed by Fire: a story of the Franco-Prussian War'' (1904)
*''The Castle of the White Flag: a tale of the Franco-German War'' (1904)
*''The Secret of Wold Hall'' (1905)
*''Fallen Fortunes'' (1906)
*''A Heroine of France: The Story of Joan of Arc'' (1906)
*''Little Lady Val; a tale of the Days of Good Queen Bess'' (1906)
*''For the Faith: A Story of the Young Pioneers of Reformation in Oxford''
*''Miss Meyrick's Niece'' (1910)
*''The Qualities of Mercy'' (1911) (as Cecil Adair)
*''Mr. Hatherley's Boys'' (before 1923)
*''Queen's Manor School'' (1923)
*''Francesca'' (1927) (as Cecil Adair)
*''The Sign of the Red Cross'' (before 1911)
References
Sources
*''Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction 1900–1914: New Voices in the Age of Uncertainty'', ed. Kemp, Mitchell, Trotter (OUP, 1997)
*Hilary Clare, ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''
*Penny Brown, "Reinventing the Maid: images of Joan of Arc in French and English children's literature", ''The Presence of the Past in Children's Literature'' ed. Ann Lawson Lucas (Praeger, 2003)
Further reading
*Kimberley Reynolds, ''Girls Only?: gender and popular children's fiction in Britain, 1880-1910'' (Harvester Wheatsheaf 1990)
Pictures from French and Italian translations of ''Drifted ashore or A Child without a Name''
External links
*
*
Works by or about Evelyn Everett-Greenat
HathiTrustWorks by or about Evelyn Everett-Greenat
Google Books
Google Books (previously known as Google Book Search, Google Print, and by its code-name Project Ocean) is a service from Google Inc. that searches the full text of books and magazines that Google has scanned, converted to text using optical ...
Works by or about Evelyn Everett-Greenat UPenn Library
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Everett-Green, Evelyn
1856 births
1932 deaths
19th-century English writers
19th-century pseudonymous writers
20th-century pseudonymous writers
20th-century English women writers
Alumni of Bedford College, London
English children's writers
English historical novelists
English romantic fiction writers
English women novelists
Pseudonymous women writers
Victorian women writers
Victorian writers
Women historical novelists
Women romantic fiction writers
Writers of historical fiction set in the Middle Ages
Writers of historical fiction set in the early modern period
Writers of historical romances