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FRANC, MAUD JEAN née CONGREVE, MATILDA JANE, MRS E. EVANS
(1827-1886), author of religious tales, |
was the daughter of Dr Henry Congreve and was born in 1827. She came to South
Australia in 1852, started a school at Mount Barker and about the year 1859
married the Rev. E. Evans, a Baptist minister, who died some four years later.
In 1860 Mrs Evans opened a school at Angaston which was still in existence in
1868. She wrote her first story, Marian; or the light of Some One's Home
while she was at Mount Barker and it appears to have been immediately
successful. The British Museum catalogue records an edition published at Bath in
1860, a second edition was published by John Darton and Company in 1861, and
another edition published by Sampson Low appeared in the same year. She had
chosen as a pseudonym Maud Jean Franc, but in her later books variations in the
spelling of both Maud and Jean appeared. Her second book Vermont Vale
came out in 1866 and during the next 19 years 13 other volumes were published.
She died in 1886 and was survived by two sons. The elder, Henry Congreve Evans,
who died in 1899, was leader of the staff of the Adelaide Advertiser and
author of the libretto of Immomeena: an Australian Comic Opera published
in 1893. The younger, William James Evans, was joint author with his mother of
Christmas Bells, a collection of short stories published in 1882. He also
published in 1898 Rhymes without Reason and died in 1904.
The stories of Maud Jean Franc were often reprinted. A collected edition in
13 volumes was published in 1888 and 40 years after, her publishers, Messrs
Sampson Low, stated that they were still selling (The Bookman, Sept.
1928). They are pleasantly told tales somewhat sentimental and rhetorical in
style, sincerely religious and didactic in theme.
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