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  1. Alice Caroline Kipling (4 April 1837 – 22 November 1910) was one of the MacDonald sisters, Englishwomen of the Victorian era, four of whom were notable for their contribution to the arts and their marriages to well-known men.

  2. Alice MacDonald Fleming (1868-1948), who sometimes published as Beatrice Kipling and who was known by her family as "Trix," is the daughter of Lockwood Kipling and Alice MacDonald Kipling and sister of Rudyard Kipling.

  3. 23 de mai. de 2018 · Fleming, Alice Kipling (1868-1948) Sister of British author Rudyard Kipling who became a well-known psychic, producing automatic writing under the name "Mrs. Holland." Born June 11, 1868, Alice Kipling was privately educated. She went to India at age 16 and married British army officer John Fleming.

  4. MacDonald sisters. Images of the four MacDonald sisters: Louisa Baldwin (top left), Agnes Poynter (top right), Georgiana Burne-Jones (bottom left), all in paintings by Edward Poynter, and Alice Kipling (bottom right), in a photograph possibly by Poynter. The Macdonald sisters were four English women of part-Scottish descent born ...

  5. Alice MacDonald Kipling (1837-1910) was born in Sheffield, England. She was one of four sisters who would go on to have illustrious careers in the arts, including pre-Raphaelit Georgiana Burne-Jones and author Louisa Baldwin (see Judith Flanders, A Circle of Sisters. Alice MacDonald married John Lockwood Kipling and moved with him to Bombay in ...

  6. 5 de fev. de 2015 · The core of this archive will consist of materials by and about the Kipling family – especially John Lockwood Kipling, Rudyard Kipling, Alice MacDonald Kipling, and Alice Kipling (who published novels as Beatrice Grange and Mrs. J.M. Fleming).

  7. orlando.cambridge.org › people › 9de59fec-bfb4-4e2eAlice Kipling | Orlando

    Rudyard's mother, Alice Kipling (born Macdonald), wrote poetry as a young woman and journalism in her maturity. She acquired powerful connections through family marriages.