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Emily Owen

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Emily Owen
Born
Emily Montague

(1822-02-06)6 February 1822
Died17 June 1885(1885-06-17) (aged 63)
UK
Known forWriting
SpouseOctavius Freire Owen

Emily Owen (6 February 1822 — 17 June 1885) was an English composer, poet and author in the Victorian era.

She was married to Octavius Freire Owen, and published as Mrs. Octavius Freire Owen.

Personal life

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Emily Montague was born on 6 February 1822 in Gloucester, the fourth daughter of William Montague of Constitution House.[1]

On 21 September 1843, she married Octavius Freire Owen with whom she had five sons and five daughters, including:[1][2]

  1. Theodore Montague Nugent born 14 November 1844, became a vicar and married Sarah Elworthy in 1872. They had nine children.
  2. Mary Edith Montague born 24 July 1847, and married Henry Hugh. They had five daughters, one of whom died.
  3. Florence Emily Octavia born in Burstow on 11 July 1849.
  4. Eustace Clare Lennox born in Burstow on 1 July 1851, and became an architect.
  5. Rupert Kenneth Wilson born in Burstow on 3 April 1853, and worked as a clerk for H. M. Civil Service. He married Annie Julia of Gloucester 9 February 1882.
  6. Ethel Rose Marie Josephine born 5 April 1855.
  7. Angela Vera Zoe Gwendoline born 11 April 1857.
  8. Geraldine Anna Violet born 22 January 1862.

Writing

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Owen worked as a writer, poet, and composer.[1][2] She also edited Home Thoughts a low cost monthly magazine that focused on biographies, essays, poetry, sketches, and stories.[3]

Selected publications

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An 1862 edition of The Heroines of Domestic Life is held in the permanent collection of The British Museum.[6]

Death

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Owen died 17 June 1885, and was buried in Woking.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Lloyd, J. Y. W. (1887). The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher, and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog. p. 470. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Collections Online | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  3. ^ Home thoughts, a monthly magazine of literature, science, and domestic economy. (1855). United Kingdom
  4. ^ HASEGAWA, Masayo. "The Hero Out of the Home in Bleak House: Dickens’s Perceptions on Masculinity and Domestic Ideology." 英文学研究 支部統合号 11 (2018): 289-299.
  5. ^ Smith, J. (1999). “A noble type of good Heroic womanhood”: the popular rhetoric of Florence Nightingale’s enshrinement. Nineteenth-Century Prose, 26(1), 59.
  6. ^ "print; book; book-illustration | British Museum". The British Museum. Retrieved 6 April 2022.