Jane Ellen Panton

Jane Ellen Panton
in a painting
Born 18 October 1847
Regents Park
Died 13 May 1923
Bloomsbury
Nationality United Kingdom
Known for writing
Spouse(s) James Albert Panton
Children five

Jane Ellen Panton or Jane Ellen Frith Panton; Jane Ellen Frith (18 October 1847 – 13 May 1923) was an English writer.

Life

Panton was born as Jane Ellen Frith in Regents Park in 1847. Her father, William Powell Frith was a very successful painter and Panton reports that he showed very little interest in his children. After her mother, Isabelle Jane, died in 1880 she found out that her father had a mistress and further children. At this point her father married his former mistress.

Panton appeared as a model in the 1859 painting trilogy Past and Present by Augustus Egg which coincidentally deals with a spouse being unfaithful. She also appeared in other two paintings; one by her father and the other by Alfred Elmore. Her father's house would host visits by Charles Dickens and John Ruskin.[1]

She married James Albert Panton.[2] at All Saints' Church in Kensington on 10 August 1869. Her husband was a partner in a family brewery business and he was brought out by his brother's widow in 1882. They lived briefly in Bournemouth before moving to Bromley. Panton's friend was the writer Dinah Craik who lived nearby. Panton decided to write to raise money and she pitched the idea of articles on home furnishing to the Ladies Pictorial magazine. Panton's articles and the idea of writing about interior design was original. Panton not only wrote but found that she could earn substantial sums by becoming an interior design consultant.

Panton's novels were numerous but "undistinguished".[1] They included Having and Holding. A Story of Country Life, which deals with rural politics in a fictional Southern English county.[3]

Panton died in Bloomsbury in 1923.

Works

  • Panton's Poems (1880)
  • Country Sketches in Black and White (1882)
  • From Kitchen to Garret: Hints for Young Householders (1887)
  • Homes of Taste: Economical Hints (1890)
  • Within Four Walls: A Handbook for Invalids (1893)
  • Suburban Residences and How To Circumvent Them (1896)[4]
  • Leaves from a Life (1908) (her autobiography)
  • A Cannibal Crusader: An Allegory for the Times (1908)
  • Leaves from a Garden (1910)
  • Most of the Game (1911)

References

  1. 1 2 Charlotte Mitchell, ‘Panton , Jane Ellen (1847–1923)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 30 Oct 2016
  2. 'Obituary: Mrs. J. E. Panton', The Times, 1923
  3. London: Jarndyce Catalogue No. CCXXXII. Women Writers 1789–1948, Part III, P–Z, Item 3. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  4. Jane Ellen Panton (16 August 2012). Suburban Residences and How to Circumvent Them. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-05320-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.