Frances Milton Trollope

Frances Milton Trollope
Oil on canvas of Frances Trollope
by Auguste Hervieu, c. 1832
Born
Frances Milton

(1779-03-10)10 March 1779
Bristol, England
Died6 October 1863(1863-10-06) (aged 84)
Florence, Italy
Other namesFanny Trollope
OccupationNovelist
Notable workDomestic Manners of the Americans
Spouse
Thomas Anthony Trollope
(m. 1809; died 1835)
Children7; including Anthony, Thomas, and Cecilia
Parent(s)William Milton
Mary Gresley

Frances Milton Trollope, also known as Fanny Trollope (10 March 1779 – 6 October 1863), was an English novelist who wrote as Mrs. Trollope or Mrs. Frances Trollope. Her book, Domestic Manners of the Americans (1832), observations from a trip to the United States, is the best known.

She also wrote social novels: one against slavery is said to have influenced Harriet Beecher Stowe, and she also wrote the first industrial novel, and two anti-Catholic novels, which used a Protestant position to examine self-making.

Some recent scholars note that modernist critics have omitted women writers such as Frances Trollope.[1] In 1839, The New Monthly Magazine claimed, "No other author of the present day has been at once so read, so much admired, and so much abused".[2]

Two of her sons, Thomas Adolphus and Anthony, became writers,[3] as did her daughter-in-law Frances Eleanor Trollope (née Ternan), second wife of Thomas Adolphus Trollope.

  1. ^ Nicola Diane Thompson, Victorian Women Writers and the Woman Question, Cambridge University Press, 2012.
  2. ^ Quoted in M. Sadleir, Trollope: a commentary (London, 1945) p. 112.
  3. ^ Chisholm 1911.