Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Henrietta Camilla Jenkin

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

Died
  
1885, Scotland, United Kingdom

Books
  
Cousin Stella, Who Breaks‑Pays (Italian Pr, Madame de Beaupré

Henrietta Jenkin or Henrietta Jackson; Henrietta Camilla Jenkin; Henrietta Camilla Jackson (1807–1885) was an English novelist.

Contents

Life

Jenkin was born in Jamaica in about 1807. She was the only daughter in four children. She married in 1832 and her son Fleeming Jenkin was born the following year. By 1840 she was publishing the first of her books. In 1859 she made her name when she published the anti-slavery novel Cousin Stella; or, Conflict.

She moved to Paris in 1867 and the following she went to Genoa. Whilst there she was involved in Liberal causes until she left in 1851. She moved to Edinburgh when her son was appointed a professor at the university.

Jenkin and her husband were living in Edinburgh when she died only days after her husband in 1885. Edinburgh]].

Works

  1. ‘Who Breaks, Pays,’ 1861
  2. ‘Skirmishing,’ 1862.
  3. ‘Once and Again,’ 1865.
  4. ‘Two French Marriages,’ 1868 (republished in New York as ‘A Psyche of To-day,’ 1868
  5. ‘Madame de Beauprés,’ 1869.
  6. ‘Within an Ace,’ 1869.
  7. ‘Jupiter's Daughters,’ 1874.

References

Henrietta Camilla Jenkin Wikipedia