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  1. Elsie Martindale Hueffer (née Martindale; 28 September 1876 – died 29 January 1949) was an early translator of Guy de Maupassant’s short stories into English. She was married to the novelist and poet Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939).

  2. Joseph Leopold Ford Hermann Madox Hueffer 17 December 1873 Merton, Surrey, England: Died: 26 June 1939 (aged 65) Deauville, France: Pen name: Ford Madox Ford: Occupation: Novelist, publisher: Period: 1873–1939: Spouse: Elsie Martindale Hueffer: Partner: Violet Hunt Stella Bowen Janice Biala: Children: 3: Relatives: Francis Hueffer ...

    • 3
    • 1873–1939
  3. It has also been suggested that Ford's attempt to divorce his wife, Elsie Martindale Hueffer and marry Violet Hunt lies behind the novel's time-travelling theme. [1] Plot summary. Unlike Twain's Hank Morgan and some successors, Ford's Mr. Sorrell makes only a very half-hearted attempt to build modern weaponry and machinery in the Middle Ages.

    • Ford Madox Ford
    • 363 pp
    • 1911
    • 1911
  4. In 1894 Ford eloped with his school-girlfriend Elsie Martindale, the daughter of Dr William Martindale, a prominent analytical chemist, who opposed her marrying someone with such unreliable financial prospects. Ford and Elsie married in Gloucester on 17 May 1894.

  5. Overview. Elizabeth Martindale. (1876—1949) Quick Reference. (1876–1949) married (1894) F. M. Hueffer (1873–1939). Elsie Hueffer was the author of one undistinguished novel, Margaret Hever (1909), about a triangular relationship between a remarkable young girl, an aged ... From: Martindale, Elizabeth in The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction »

  6. In 1894, Ford eloped with Elsie Martindale. The couple left London and settled in Romney Marsh, where Ford became acquainted with Henry James, H.G. Wells, and Stephen Crane. After suffering a nervous breakdown in 1904, he spent some time in Germany.

  7. August 1893: The Questions at the Well by Fenil Haig [the first of many pseudonyms Ford used] was published by Digby, Long & Co., dedicated to Miss Elsie Martindale. Aside from the number of Elsie Martindale’s typed and handwritten story manuscripts, and the books of Ford’s that remained together in her possession, the most striking thing ...