The Duchess Who Wasn’t Day
August 27, 2025-August 27, 2025 -
UK, UK
The world is filled with books written by women writers who published anonymously or under assumed names due to the fact that women during their time had fewer rights. The Brontë sisters, Alice Bradley Sheldon, Mary Ann Evans and many others can be counted among those who lived in a society where their stance as women caused them to hide behind pen names. Another one of these important women was Margaret Wolfe Hungerford: The Duchess.
Even as a young child in County Cork, Ireland, Margaret enjoyed making up stories and often won prizes at school for her writing abilities. Sadly, by the time she was 25 years old, Margaret was a widow with three children, so she published her first novel, Phyllis, to support her children.
Her fiction was of the light romantic sort that offered readers in the English-speaking world a chance to escape through her characters. It didn’t have a lot of character development or dealing with heavy topics, but that’s probably why it was so popular at the time. In fact, Margaret is responsible for the popular phrase “beauty is in the eye of the beholder”, from her book Molly Bawn. So perhaps try to slip it into conversation in celebration of The Duchess Who Wasn’t Day!
In total, The Duchess had at least 57 works attributed to her name but it is actually possible that she may have written many, many more as a lot of her early work was published as Anonymous. Later her work was published as Mrs Hungerford, before “The Duchess” became popular in the States. She also wrote many newspaper articles in addition to the work of caring for her large family.
Margaret secretly remarried in 1882, to Thomas Henry Hungerford and they had two sons and a daughter together. She eventually died of typhoid fever in 1897, at the young age of only 41 years old. Sadly, at the end of her life, The Duchess left an unfinished, unpublished work behind, titled “The Coming of Chloe”.
27 Aug 25
00:00 - 23:59
The Duchess Who Wasn’t Day