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Women in History of Scots Descent
Margaret Oliphant


Margaret OliphantOliphant, Margaret [nee Wilson] (1828-1897). Novelist. Margaret Wilson was born at Wallyford near Edinburgh, on 4 April 1828. She grew up in Glasgow and Liverpool, and in 1849 published her first novel, Passages in the Life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland. The work, with its sharp delineation of Scottish character and setting, proved extremely popular and went through three successive editions. Margaret Wilson followed this with Caleb Field (1851) and Merkland (1851). In 1853 her novel Katie Stewart was serialized in Blackwood's Magazine, beginning a professional and personal association with the Blackwood firm and family that was to last until her death in 1897.

In 1852 Margaret Wilson moved to London, where she married her cousin, artist Francis William Oliphant. Her work continued unabated, and she produced several novels for serialization in Blackwood's Magazine, including A Quiet Heart (1854), Zaidee (1856) and The Athelings (1857). She was soon earning a steady income from her work, which she was to need after her husband died in 1857, leaving her in debt and with three children to provide for. Between 1861 and 1878 she embarked on an ambitious series of novels on English provincial life, which was to include some of her most accomplished work. The seven novel series, entitled 'The Chronicles of Carlingford', was closely Modeled on Anthony Trollope's Barsetshire novels, and bore similarities in concerns and themes to George Eliot's works. The series included Salem Chapel (1863), The Rector and The Doctor's Family (1863), The Perpetual Curate (1864), and her best known work, Miss Marjoribanks (1866). The final novel in the series, Phoebe Junior: A Last Chronicle of Carlingford, was published in 1876. 

In 1864, her daughter died, and soon after Margaret Oliphant took charge of three of her widowed brother's four children. This, plus a strain of supporting her two remaining children, took its toll on her writing. After1866 her work never achieved the same critical success of her earlier efforts. By the time of her death, Margaret Oliphant had produced over 100 novels, almost 30 works of non-fiction and over articles for Blackwood's Magazine.

Found a good article on her in the Edinburgh Review (pdf)

Here is one of her novels to read here...

Kirsteen
The Story of a Scotch Family Seventy Years Ago (1891) (pdf)

Also

Harry Muir: A Tale of Scottish Life
Volume 1  |  Volume 2  |  Volume 3

Katie Stewart
A True Story and other tales by Mrs. Oliphant (1892) (pdf)

Autobiography and Letters of Mrs MOW Oliphant
by Margaret Oliphant (1899) (pdf)

The Laird of Norlaw
A Scottish Story by Mrs. Oliphant (1859) (pdf)


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