Mary Ann Kilner | |
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![]() An early edition ofAdventures of a pincushion | |
Born | (1753-12-14)14 December 1753 London, England |
Died | 1 December 1831(1831-12-01) (aged 77) Maryland Point, London |
Occupation | Writer |
Subject | Education |
Notable works | The Adventures of a Pincushion |
Mary Ann Kilner (néeMaze; 1753–1831) was a prolific English writer ofchildren's books in the late 18th century. The most famous wasThe Adventures of a Pincushion (c. 1780–1783).[1] Together, she and her sister-in-law,Dorothy Kilner, published over thirty books.[2] Mary Ann published under the name "S. S.", which stood for her home inSpital Square, London.
Mary Ann was born on 14 December 1753 at Spital (then Spittal) Square, London, the youngest child of James Maze (d. 1794), a prosperousHuguenotsilk throwster and merchant. She was bilingual in English and French and said to be very intelligent.[3] Her childhood friends were the siblingsDorothy (1755–1836) and Thomas Kilner (1750–1812). The two girls wrote to one another constantly during their childhood and teenage years. On 18 September 1774 Mary Ann married Thomas and moved to her husband's home at 33 Spital Square. They had five children, of whom Eliza (b. 1776), Frances (b. 1783) and George (born 1791) survived.[4]
Following the appearance of her sister-in-law'sThe First Principles of Religion in 1780, Mary Ann approached Dorothy's publisher,John Marshall, with her ownFamiliar Dialogues for the Instruction and Amusement of Children of Four and Five years Old, which Marshall published the following year. Some works of fiction followed:Memoirs of a Peg Top andJemima Placid in March 1782,[5] andThe Adventures of a Whipping Top andWilliam Sedley the following year. She also publishedA Course of Lectures, for Sunday Evenings: containing Religious Advice to Young Persons in 1783. Her most famous title,The Adventures of a Pincushion, was published late 1783 or early 1784. All of these works were popular and reprinted several times, the last at regular intervals until the 1830s.
Their works were originally published anonymously, but after Dorothy adopted the initials M. P. (representing her home at Maryland Point), Mary Ann used S. S. (for Spital Square).
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