Claire Annabel Caroline Grant Duff, Mrs Jackson (25 December 1870 – 12 January 1944) was a poet, writer and high society hostess. She published her memoir A Victorian Childhood in 1932 with Methuen Publishing.

Mrs. Huth Jackson (née Annabel Grant Duff), John Singer Sargent, 1907

The eldest daughter of Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff and Anna Julia Webster, she was the author of A Victorian Childhood, which was published in 1932, under the pen name Annabel Huth Jackson, using her married name.[1][2]

In 1894, she married Frederick Huth Jackson, a partner in the private bank, Frederick Huth and Sons. They had one son, Frederick, who married Helen Vinogradoff, daughter of the distinguished historian Sir Paul Vinogradoff, and three daughters: Konradin, later Lady Arthur Hobhouse; Anne Marie, later Anne Fremantle; and Claire, later Countess de Loriol Chandieu.[citation needed]

References edit

  • Jackson, Annabel Huth (1932). A Victorian Childhood. London: Methuen: UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS. Reviewed in Times Literary Supplement
  • Wood, Alan (1957). "18, author cited as Annabel Jackson". Bertrand Russell The Passionate Skeptic A Biography. Simon And Schuster.
  • David, Dierdre, ed. (2001). The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel (PDF). Cambridge University Press.
  • Fremantle, Anne (1971). Three Cornered Heart. London: New York, Viking Press. ISBN 9780670706969.

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ A Victorian Childhood, goodreads.com. Accessed 15 February 2024.
  2. ^ David, Deirdre (2001). A Victorian Childhood. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521646192.