Edith Elise Cadogan Cowper[note 1] (21 July 1859 – 18 November 1933) was a prolific and popular author of adventure stories for girls. She married yachtsman and fellow writer Frank Cowper and had eight children by him before the marriage fell apart.
Early life
Cowper was born on 21 July 1859 at Stevenage, Hertfordshire.[4] Her parents were the Reverend Edward Cadogan (1833 – 16 April 1890)[5][6] and stockbroker's daughter Alice Smith (25 January 1833 – 24 March 1913).[7][8] Cowper was the second of the couple's ten children. By the 1861 census her father was the Rector at Walton, Warwickshire, England, but moved to take up the Rectorship at Wickham in 1873,[5] where he was to remain until his death in 1890.[6]
Cowper married Frank Cooper (14 January 1849 – 28 May 1930)[9][10] at her father's church in Wicken, Northamptonshire, England on 28 December 1877. She was seventeen at the time, and her husband was ten years older.[2] He was a yachtsman, famous for single-handed cruising, and author, both of novels and of books on sailing. The couple had eight children, four boys and four girls: Frank Cadogan Cowper, Edith Alice Magdalen Cowper, Earnest Lionel Cadogen Cowper, Gerald Audrey Cadogan Cooper, Gladys Blanche Katherine Cowper, Gwenllyan Sybilla Mary Cowper, Henry Evelyn Cadogan Cowper, and Nesta Evelyn Dorothea Cowper. The first five children were registered as Cooper and had their names changed to Cowper when their father changed his name. The youngest three, being born after the name change in 1885, were registered with the surname Cowper.[11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]
Some sources suggest that Cowper had ten children, with two of them, Lois and Edward, dying in infancy, in addition to Henry.[19] However, there is no record of such births in the birth index of the Government Record Office, and Cowpers's own account of the number of children she has had in the 1911 census, with eight children born and six surviving, suggests that there were no such births.
The couple lived first in Hordle, Hampshire, where they ran a small preparatory school. Later, they built Lisle Court at Wootton in the Isle of Wight, which also served as a school.[1]: 155 The 1891 census shows Cowper living at Lisle Court with six of her children, Gerald, age 9 at the time is absent for some reason. The census shows that the house was no longer working as a school.
The marriage was not a happy one. The summary of Frank Cadogan Cowper's letters to his mother in the Royal Academy Collections states that Cowper divorced her on the grounds of violence and infidelity,[20] but Sims and Clare says that while the marriage broke up, they may never have divorced.[1]: 155 Cowper still describes herself as married in the 1911 census.
By 1901, Cowper was living in Acton in London with her four daughters, aged 12 to 21 and with her profession listed as authoress. The 1911 census found Cowper living with her daughter Nesta at Flat 7, Fairlawn Court, Acton Lane, Chiswick, London. Her other three daughters had already married, and Nesta would do so in 1914.
Cowper was living at Milford on Sea, Hampshire when she died on 18 November 1933. Her estate was valued at £977 6s.7d.
Writing
The Evening Post (New Zealand) says that Cowper published her first, book, set in the New Forest before she was 20.[21] However, the first book recorded in the Jisc Library Hub Discover database[note 2] Additional libraries are being added all the time, and the catalogue collates national, university, and research libraries.[22][23] is Hide and Seek, published in 1881. She followed this with Hasselaers in 1883. It is note clear who published the first book, but the second was published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK). The SPCK published all but three of her books until 1915, after which she began to use other publishers. She first published with Blackie & Son in 1917, and Blackie would publish nearly half of her output from then on.
Cowper wrote adventures stories for teenage girls. Many of the feature sailing.[note 3] The wilds of Canada, where one of her sons had settled before the First World War, feature in many of here stories, whether searching for gold, or trapping. Smuggling is another repeated trope, even featuring in her school story Fifth Form Adventurers.
Kate Flint said that while researching for the Woman Reader, she was hardly surprised to find how many girls in the nineteenth century openly preferred their brothers' books, with the active role models that they offered.[25] Cowper offered here girl readers active role models. The Yorkshire Post when speaking of Cowper and similar girls' authors, said that Girls need no longer impound their brothers’ books for such stories fortunately they can now see themselves as the protagonists in these romances. and that Cowper can always be relied on for action.[26]
Works
The following bibliography is based on a search on the Jisc Library Hub Discover database for books authored by Cowper.[27] In all, there are 69 books listed in the table,[note 4] as two of the items are derivatives. Cowper contributed to a number of anthologies[28] and annuals[29] but these are not included here, nor in any reissues of her work. She also wrote some short fiction for magazines,[30] but again, there are not listed here.
^Her name is subject to the following variations. Frank Cooper initially spelled his name Cooper, but changed it to Cowper by Deed Poll in 1885.[1]: 155 Cadogan was baptised Edith Eliza, and still used this form of her second name at the time of her marriage,[2] and for the 1911 census, but later came to be known as Edith Elise, and this was the form of her name at the time of her death.[3]
^The Jisc Library Hub Discover brings together the catalogues of 165 Major UK and Irish libraries.
^Her estranged husband Frank Cowper was a noted yachtsman, and was a leader in the field of single-handed cruising.[10]
^The matches the number given by Sims and Clare.[1]: 155
^Subtitled A tale of courage and endurance. Almost no details on Jisc, details instead from second-hand books page.[31]
^ abcdefWilliam Sydney Stacey (Sidney on his baptismal record) (30 June 1846 – 15 September 1929) was a prolific painter and illustrator who illustrated over 300 children's books,[32]: 406-411 mostly for boy's adventure books.[33]: 309 Stacey illustrated six of Cowper's books, matching the number illustrated by Gordon Browne.
^William Henry Charles Groome (17 November 1884 – 14 October 1913) was a prolific illustrator of children's books and a skilled watercolourist who appears to have been self-taught.[32]: 173-175
^ abcdeSheldon Press was an imprint of the SPCK.[34]
^Thomas Heath Robinson (19 June 1869 – 13 September 1944) was a talented and versatile painter, illustrator and etcher who was overshadowed by his more famous younger brothers Charles and William Heath Robinson.[32]: 406-411
^Edward Smith Hodgson (25 April 1866 – April 1923) was a well-known Scottish artist who became better knows as an issustrator of boy's adventure books.[32]: 234-235
^Nora Schlegel (18 January 1879 – 15 November 1963)[35][36] was a magazine illustrator,[37] particularly for the Windsor Magazine who also illustrated books and book covers. Most of her illustrations seem to be in half-tone. The Artist did a piece on her in December 1938
^John William Campbell (1886 – 4 May 1935) was a magazine and book illustrator who illustrated some 25 children's books, mostly girls' school stories.[32]: 111-112
^Charles Dudley Tennant (1866–1952),[38] active 1898 – 1918. Painter and Illustrator in black and white, full colour, and half-tone.[39]: 297 The sculptor Trevor Tenant (2 July 1900 – last quarter 1980) was his son.[40]
^Dramatised as a 45 minute radio play by Olive Dehn for The Children's Hour in 1936.[41]
^John (Jock) Dewar Mills (8 November 1883 – 24 June 1966) was a book illustrator who worked mainly on books for girls, ecpecially school stories.[32]: 287-289
^A 98 page abridged edition was published in 1935 as Anna Goes Sailing, a Blackie Graded Story Reader.
^ abcdeListed as a school story by Sims and Clare[1]: 156
^Clifford Roger Flemming Williams (11 April 1880 – 27 December 1940))[42][43] was a black and white artist and watercolourist. He contributed to several magazines,[33]: 138 as well as to a small number of books.
^William Bryce Hamilton (Brice on baptismal record) (28 October 1894 – 26 May 1955) illustrated only about 30 children's books. He was more famous for his work illustrating Sexton Blake and his earlier work for The Sphere.[32]: 187-188
^Percy Bell Hickling (22 September 1976 – 10 June 1951 was an illustrator with a large magazine output, as well as illustrating children's books, especially girls' school stories.[32]: 217-220
^Reissued in 1954 in a 168 page abridged edition, edited and adapted for school reading as No.5 in the Girls' section of Blackie's Life and Adventure Series.
^ abcdeSims, Sue; Clare, Hilary (2020). The Encyclopaedia of Girls' School Stories. Coleford, Radstock: Girls Gone By Publishers. ISBN978-1-84745-257-3.
^ abNorthamptonshire Record Office. "Reference: 364P/9: 1876 Marriage Solemnized by Banns in the Church of Wickham in the county of NorthamptonshierLondon: Frank Cooper". Northampton, England: Parish Registers. Northampton: Northamptonshire Record Office. p. 76.
^London Metropolitan Archives (2 July 1905). "Reference Number: p82/geo1/005: Baptisms solemnized in the Parish Saint George, Bloomsbury. In the County of Middlesex, in the year 1834". London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1917. Provo, Utah: Ancestry.com. p. 135.
^London Metropolitan Archives (2 July 1905). "Reference Number: P69/BOT4/A/01/Ms 4519/5: Baptisms solemnized in the Parish of St Botolph. Bishopsgate City of London, in the year 1849". London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1917. Provo, Utah: Ancestry.com. p. 237.
^Flint, Kate (1 January 2005). "Afterword: Women Readers Revisited". In Phegley; Badia, Jennifer (eds.). Reading Women: Literary Figures and Cultural Icons from the Victorian Age to the Present. University of Toronto Press. p. 290. ISBN978-0-8020-8928-1. Archived from the original on 31 August 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2020 – via Google Books.
^ abcdefghiKirkpatrick, Robert J. (2019). The Men Who Drew For Boys (And Girls): 101 Forgotten Illustrators of Children's Books: 1844-1970. London: Robert J. Kirkpatrick.
^ abHoufe, Simon (1996). Dictionary of 19th Century British Book Illustrators and Caricaturists. Woodbridge: Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN1-85149-193-7.
^"(Dudley) Trevor Tennant". Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951. Archived from the original on 6 June 2020. Retrieved 14 August 2023.