Florence Eva Simpson
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Florence Eva Simpson (1865–1923), who wrote under the name of Elva Lorence, was a popular British composer and writer.[1]
Florence Simpson initially made a name for herself as a composer of songs and ballads – her first known published song being Her Childhood's Kingdom, written in 1893. Many of her songs set poems written and published by her sister Katherine Ashton Simpson, who became a well-known writer and artist.[1] She also set a number of the poems of Fred G. Bowles, whose work she admired.[2]
By the mid-1890s Simpson was widely known and acclaimed for her songs, which were popular and extensively performed by amateur and professional singers.[3] The dramatic contralto Clara Butt regularly sang Simpson's song Old Donald's Lament,[4] while American contralto Antoinette Sterling had Simpson's songs My ein Countrie and There is Rest is for the Weary in her repertoire. She performed There is Rest is for the Weary in a concert at Prince's Hall on Piccadilly, London, in May 1894, with the audience demanding an encoure.[5] Colleen Alannah and Barnbima were performed by singer Alice Gomez, while A Window in Spain was a favourite of the singers Madame Belle Cole and Osborne Rayner.[4]
Florence Simpson and her sister Katherine Ashton Simpson collaborated on several operettas, including the comic opera Nanette or The Mermaid's Bubble (1896),[6] and A Peep into Flowerland or Terra Flora (1902).[7] The works were extremely popular and were performed numerous times across the country.[8][9]
Another musical collaborator on both the operettas was George Kennedy Chrystie, Simpson's husband.[6] Chrystie was a published composer in his own right,[10] writing settings of a number of poems including those by his sister-in-law Katherine Ashton Simpson.[11]
Simpson's creative partnership with Katherine Ashton Simpson effectively came to an end in 1906 when Katherine married and moved to Hartpury, Gloucestershire.[12]
Simpson also published a number of short stories as well as plays, poetry and books.[7] Her short stories were published in newspapers and were popular with readers.[13] Most notable is perhaps her chilling Christmas ghost story, The Demon Motor: Story of New Year's Eve, published in 1901.[14]
Like her sister, Katherine Ashton Simpson, Simpson received painting tuition as a young woman. An oil painting of Henry Read Pridgeon (1817–1886), District Registrar of Honiton, Devon, signed 'Eva Simpson' and with the monogram 'FES', is attributed to her.[15]