Fanny Steers

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Frances Steers (1797–1861) was an English watercolourist and landscapist, as well as an author and composer. She is known for small-scale landscapes such as The Reeks, Killarney, Ireland, and exhibited a number of works at the New Society of Painters in Water Colours, as one of its few female members.[1] Both William Makepeace Thackeray and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow bought her paintings, and a poetic quote from her work appears in the first edition of Bartlett's Familiar Quotations. Two of her prints are in the collection of the British Museum.[2]

Fanny Steers was the eldest daughter of William and Mary Steers,[1] who with their daughters ran lodging houses in Malvern Wells, for pilgrims who hoped to be cured by Malvern water.[3]

On 11 January 1797, she was baptised Frances at Hanley Castle; she is buried in the Hanley Castle churchyard.[1]

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