Lillian Spender
Lillian Spender (usually known as Mrs. John Kent Spender; 22 February 1835 – 4 May 1895) was an English writer. She contributed to major English reviews and turned later to novel-writing.
Lillian Spender  | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Born | Lillian Headland 22 February 1835 London, England  | 
| Died | 4 May 1895 (aged 60) Bath, England  | 
| Occupation | novelist | 
| Nationality | English | 
| Education | Queen's College, London | 
| Spouse | John Kent Spender (1858–1882) | 
| Children | J. A. Spender (1862–1942) Harold Spender (1864–1926) Hugh Frederick Spender (1873–1930) 1 other son  | 
| Relatives | Stephen Spender (grandson) | 
Early years and education
    
Lillian (known informally as Lily) Headland was born on 22 February 1835 as the daughter of Edward Headland, a well-known physician of Portland Place, London. Her mother was the daughter of Ferdinand de Medina, a Spaniard. Spender was educated at Queen's College, Harley Street.[1]
Career
    
In 1858, she married John Kent Spender, physician to the Mineral Water Hospital, Bath.[1]
After her marriage, Spender turned her attention to literature. She contributed to the London Quarterly Review, the English Woman's Journal, the Dublin University Review, the British Quarterly Review, and a magazine called Meliora, but after 1869, she mainly wrote novels. She was active in education and social work in Bath until her health failed.[1]
Lillian Spender died at Bath on 4 May 1895. Seven of Spender's eight children survived her. Two of her sons, J. A. Spender and Harold Spender, became London journalists.[1]
Selected works
    
- Brothers-in-Law (1869)
 - Her Own Fault (1871)
 - Parted Lives (1873)
 - Jocelyn's Mistake (1875)
 - Mark Eylmer's Revenge (1876)
 - Both in the Wrong (1878)
 - Godwyn's Ordeal (1879)
 - Till Death Us Do Part (1881)
 - Gabrielle de Bourdaine (1882)
 - Mr. Nobody (1884)
 - The Recollections of a Country Doctor (1885)
 - Trust Me: A Novel (1886)
 - Her Brother's Keeper: A Novel (1887)
 - Kept Secret (1888)
 - Lady Hazelton's Confession (1890)
 - A Waking (1892)
 - A Strange Temptation (1893)
 - A Modern Quixote (1894)
 
References
    
    
Sources
    
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Carlyle, Edward Irving (1898). "Spender, Lily". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 53. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 
.png.webp)