Frances Rowden

British schoolmistress and poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frances Arabella Rowden, later Frances de St Quentin, (1774 – c.1840) was a British schoolmistress and poet. Her students included Emma Roberts, Anna Maria Fielding, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Frances Anne Kemble and Rosina Bulwer Lytton.

Born
Frances Arabella Rowden

1774
Diedc.1840 (aged around 66)
OthernamesFrances Arabella de Quentin
Occupationschool teacher
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Frances Rowden
1801 text book
Born
Frances Arabella Rowden

1774
Diedc.1840 (aged around 66)
Other namesFrances Arabella de Quentin
Occupationschool teacher
Known forher teaching
SpouseDominique de St Quentin
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Life

Rowden was the first of four daughters born to Frances and Robert Rowden. She was born in 1774 and in 1779 her family moved to Henley-on-Thames where her father borrowed money from her aunt who ran a school (where she was educated). Her father who was a dealer in spirits and drugs died in 1782 in debt.[1]

Rowden went on to work at Reading Abbey Girls' School which was run by the principal Dominique de St Quentin and Ann Pitts who was the senior mistress and his wife. The school's former pupils included Jane Austen.[1]

In 1801 she published A Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany[2] which was unusual in that it broke up the facts about botany with poems.[1] Her book may have been seen as an uncontroversial alternative to Erasmus Darwin.[3]

During Rowden's eventful career she had a number of notable pupils. These included actress Frances Anne Kemble, and the novelists Anna Maria Fielding, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Emma Roberts, and Rosina Bulwer Lytton.[1]

She died around 1840.

References

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