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  1. Florence Emily Hardy. Florence Emily Hardy, née Dugdale, was a writer of children's stories and the second wife and, later, biographer of Thomas Hardy. Florence was the daughter of school headmaster Edward Dugdale. She attended National Infants School in Enfield for two years until 1886, when she went to St Andrew's Girls School.

  2. Shortly after her marriage to Thomas Hardy on February 10, 1914, Florence Dugdale wrote to Harold Barlow, a pupil from her teaching days – “the most literary of all my pupils, & a very nice pupil too” – with this news, in the first of three letters that have recently come to light. (Harold, the son of an electric wire-maker and a ...

  3. Abstract. In August 1905 Hardy had received a letter from an unknown woman who wished to see him. She had probably expressed admiration of his work and introduced herself as an aspiring writer who had contributed frequently to her local newspaper. Hardy was won by her assurance that she would not take advantage of the interview by publishing an ...

  4. Florence Emily Hardy (née Dugdale) (1879-1937), Writer; second wife of Thomas Hardy. Sitter in 1 portrait. Like. List Thumbnail. Sort by. Florence Emily Hardy (née Dugdale) by Rodway Gardner. print, 1910s.

  5. 28 de jan. de 2024 · Florence Dugdale Wikipedia. (Text) CC BY-SA. Florence Emily Dugdale (12 January 1879 17 October 1937) was a writer of children's stories and the second wife of Thomas Hardy, whose biography she wrote. Dugdale was born in Edmonton, London, the daughter of school headmaster Edward Dugdale. Florence attended National Infants School in Enfield f.

  6. 1 de abr. de 2020 · Miss Dugdale had been introduced to Hardy late in 1905 and by 1910 she was typing up a novella, The Maid On The Shore, by Hardy’s first wife. Prof Richardson said: “It is rare to find such significant letters. They give an intimate glimpse into life at Hardy’s home, Max Gate, and the loves and losses Florence shared with Hardy.

  7. 15 de out. de 2006 · Neither Emma nor Florence Hardy could compete with their husband's passion for Bathsheba and Tess, as Claire Tomalin's haunting biography reveals, says Hilary Spurling.