Ada Maria Jenyns, also known as Mrs. Robert Jocelyn or Ada Maria Jocelyn (7 December 1860 – 18 February 1931),[1] was a British Victorian novelist.[2]

Biography

Ada Maria Jenyns was born 7 December 1860 in Aldershot, Hampshire, in north-east England to father Soame Gambier Jenyns (1826–873) and mother Rita Thompson. Her paternal grandfather was George Jenyns (1795–1876), Esquire of Bottisham Hall. Her father was an army colonel,[3] and her parents were married in 1859. She had a sister named Florence.[4] In 1882, she married Robert Jocelyn, a soldier and later the 7th Earl of Roden.[3]

The Jocelyns had three children. Their only boy was Captain Robert Soame Jocelyn, 8th Earl of Roden (September 1883 – October 1956).[5] The couple's two daughters were Julian Mary (December 1885 – 1973) and Marcia Valda (January 1891 – 1972)[6] Marcia married first Robert Barclay Black and then in 1924 Eric Miles, who had a long military career, retiring as a major general.[7]

Career

Writers Ouida and George Whyte-Melville are said to have been her literary inspirations. Jenyns compiled 19 works over her 23-year career.[2]

  • £100,000 versus Ghosts: A Novel (1888)
  • A Distracting Guest: A Novel (1889)
  • The M.F.H.'s Daughter (1890)
  • The Criton Hunt Mystery (1890)
  • A Big Stake: A Novel (1892)
  • Drawn Blank: A Novel (1892)
  • Only a Horse Dealer: A Novel (1893)
  • For One Season Only: A Sporting Novel (1893)
  • Run to Ground: A Sporting Novel (1894)
  • Pamela's Honeymoon: A Novel (1894)
  • A Dangerous Brute: A Sporting Sketch (1895)
  • Juanita Carrington: A Sporting Sketch (1896)
  • A Regular Fraud: A Novel (1896)
  • Only a Flirt: A Novel (1897)
  • Only a Love Story (1897)
  • Lady Mary's Experiences: A Novel (1897)
  • Miss Rayburn's Diamonds (1898)
  • Henry Massinger: A Novel (1899)
  • The Sea of Fortune (1901)

See also

References

  1. ^ Coe, Douglas (August 2019). "The later Earls of Roden" (PDF).
  2. ^ a b "At the Circulating Library Author Information: Ada Maria Jocelyn". www.victorianresearch.org. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  3. ^ a b Sutherland, John (1990). The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press. p. 336. ISBN 0804718423.
  4. ^ Burke, Bernard (1882). Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, Volume 1. Harrison. p. 869.
  5. ^ "North Irish Horse – Gallery – North Irish Horsemen – Jocelyn". www.northirishhorse.com.au. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  6. ^ Lodge, Edmund (1907). The peerage, baronetage, knightage & companionage of the British Empire for 1907. London: Kelly's Directories. p. 1519.
  7. ^ https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp100570/lady-marcia-valda-miles-nee-jocelyn National Portrait Gallery, photo of Lady Marcia Valda Miles


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