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  1. INTRODUCED BY Rosemarie Morgan. Florence Dugdale's career as a journalist and short-story writer for children. was not without modest successes. 'Baby Brother1 is the second of her uncollected stories to be published in the Hardy Review - it is typical, in. style and content, of the tales written for young children of her generation.

  2. Ian recently passed the letters to Professor Angelique Richardson, from the University of Exeter, who is leading the Hardy’s Correspondents Project, where letters written to Hardy are being digitised and put on a website for people to read. The first letter was sent to Harold on February 10, 1914, not long after Florence’s marriage to Hardy.

  3. 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.

  4. 2 de abr. de 2020 · In the three letters, Florence writes about how her marriage is a “genuine love match” and how her husband is “one of the kindest, most humane men in the world”. They were written to Harold Barlow, whom Florence had taught. They had been kept by Harold’s daughter, Josephine Barlow, and were discovered by his grandsons Ian and Colin Nicol.

  5. Who was Florence Dugdale? Florence Dugdale was born in Edmonton in 1879. Although she trained as a teacher, her passion was for writing and she began publishing children’s stories and reviews in the Enfield Observer and then in national magazines. Her life changed in 1905 when she wrote a letter to her literary hero, famous novelist Thomas Hardy.

  6. It seems that Hardy had only a modest degree of interest in the ancestry of his second wife, Florence Emily Dugdale, although it is recorded that the couple visited Lady St Mary church in Wareham and studied some Dugdale monuments. In Dorchester Museum, there is a manuscript pedigree of Florence's immediate Dugdale ancestors which is thought to ...

  7. Dugdale was born in Edmonton, London, the daughter of school headmaster Edward Dugdale. Education Florence attended National Infants School in Enfield for two years until 1886, when she went to Street Andrew"s Girls School. Career From 1895 onwards Florence"s life would be centred on her teaching.