Elizabeth Owens Blackburne Casey (10 May 1848 – 6 April 1894) was an Irish writer and novelist who published the first biographical reference book of Irish women. She used the pen name of E. Owens Blackburne.

E. Owens Blackburne
Born
Elizabeth Owens Blackburne Casey

10 May 1848
Slane, County Meath
Died6 April 1894 (1894-04-07) (aged 45)
Drumcondra, Dublin
NationalityIrish

Early life and education

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Born Elizabeth Owens Blackburne Casey on 10 May 1848 in Slane, County Meath, she was the daughter of Andrew Casey and Miss Mills. She went blind when she was 11 but had her sight restored by Sir William Wilde. Casey was educated in Trinity College Dublin. She went on to become a writer. She contributed to the Irish Nationalist paper, The Nation. She moved to London when she was about 25 to work as a journalist. It was there she published several novels which were quite popular. However one of her novels Erin: A Story of Today was published at about the same time as the Phoenix Park Murders which damaged her reputation and resulted in a loss of sales for her. As a result, she required support from the Royal Literary Fund to survive. She lived poorly and died in a fire in Drumcondra, Dublin in 1894.[1][2][3][4][5]

Timing

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The timing of a story calling for greater understanding between Ireland and England in a time when the political situation between the two countries was tense and two senior officials had just been murdered by radical rebels meant that Casey was treated very badly by the press. In the London Athenaeum review on 20 May 1882 the press called Blackburne "a thoroughgoing partisan of the Land League". As a result, her books would no longer be published.[2][6]

Bibliography

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  • A Woman Scorned (1876 and 1887)
  • A Bunch of Shamrocks (1877)
  • Illustrious Irishwomen (1877)
  • Molly Carew (1879)
  • The Glen of the Silver Birches (1880)
  • My Sweetheart When a Boy (1880)
  • As the Crow Flies (1880)
  • The Love That Loves Always (1881)
  • The Heart of Erin: An Irish Story of Today (1882)
  • Con O’Donnell, and Other Legends and Poems for Recitation (1890)
  • Aunt Delia's Heir
  • In the Vale of Honey
  • Shadows in the Sunlight
  • A Modern Parnassus
  • The Way Women Love
  • A Chronicle of Barham

References and sources

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  1. ^ "Death record" (PDF). civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie.
  2. ^ a b "E. Owens Blackburne (1848-94)". Ricorso. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  3. ^ Ashley, M.; Contento, W. (1995). The Supernatural Index: A Listing of Fantasy, Supernatural, Occult, Weird, and Horror Anthologies. Bibliographies and indexes in science fiction, fantasy, and horror. Greenwood Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-313-24030-0. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  4. ^ Morris, W.; Kelvin, N. (2014). The Collected Letters of William Morris, Volume II, Part B: 1885-1888. Princeton Legacy Library. Princeton University Press. p. 412. ISBN 978-1-4008-5893-4. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  5. ^ "E. Owens Blackburne © Orlando Project". Orlando. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  6. ^ KELLEHER, MARGARET (2003). "Field Day Anthology and Irish Women's Literary Studies" (PDF). Rish Review. 30.