Jane Stanley (died 1803)

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Born1736 (1736)
Died1803 (aged 6667)
Knutsford, England
Burial placeGreat Budworth, Cheshire
Parents
Lady
Jane Stanley
Born1736 (1736)
Died1803 (aged 6667)
Knutsford, England
Burial placeGreat Budworth, Cheshire
Parents
FamilyJames Smith-Stanley, Lord Strange (brother), Lady Elizabeth Stanley (sister)
Signature
Signature of Lady Jane Stanley, from her 1801 will

Lady Jane Stanley (1720 – 1803) [1] was a member of the Earl of Derby branch of the Stanley family. The daughter of Edward Stanley, 11th Earl of Derby she never married but, in her old age, maintained a large household at Brook House, Knutsford. A notable philanthropist, she installed and maintained footpaths in the town though, in line with her belief that couples should not walk with arms linked, she made them intentionally narrow. Stanley left significant donations in her will to friends, family, servants and to numerous charitable causes connected with the poor and sick. One bequest helped to maintain the footways in the town for many years. Stanley was the inspiration for the Honourable Mrs Jamieson in Elizabeth Gaskell's 1849 novel Cranford and the title character in her 1858 My Lady Ludlow.

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