Ida Alice Ashworth Taylor (1847–1929) was an English novelist and biographer.[1]
Ida Taylor was the daughter of the playwright
Henry Taylor and Alice Spring Rice, daughter of
Thomas Spring Rice, 1st Baron Monteagle. A Catholic convert, Taylor wrote for periodicals including The Dublin Review and The Nineteenth Century.[2] For most of her adult life she lived with her younger sister, Una, in
Montpelier Square in London. The pair "conducted a literary salon, of which the characteristic notes were intellectual interest and Irish warm-heartedness".[3]
^
ab'Miss Ida Ashworth Taylor', The Times, 22 October 1929
^Buckingham, James Silk; Sterling, John; Maurice, Frederick Denison; Stebbing, Henry; Dilke, Charles Wentworth; Hervey, Thomas Kibble; Dixon, William Hepworth; MacColl, Norman; Rendall, Vernon Horace; Murry, John Middleton (4 April 1908).
"Review: Lady Jane Grey and Her Times by I. A. Taylor". The Athenaeum (4197): 409–410.
Ida Alice Ashworth Taylor (1847–1929) was an English novelist and biographer.[1]
Ida Taylor was the daughter of the playwright
Henry Taylor and Alice Spring Rice, daughter of
Thomas Spring Rice, 1st Baron Monteagle. A Catholic convert, Taylor wrote for periodicals including The Dublin Review and The Nineteenth Century.[2] For most of her adult life she lived with her younger sister, Una, in
Montpelier Square in London. The pair "conducted a literary salon, of which the characteristic notes were intellectual interest and Irish warm-heartedness".[3]
^
ab'Miss Ida Ashworth Taylor', The Times, 22 October 1929
^Buckingham, James Silk; Sterling, John; Maurice, Frederick Denison; Stebbing, Henry; Dilke, Charles Wentworth; Hervey, Thomas Kibble; Dixon, William Hepworth; MacColl, Norman; Rendall, Vernon Horace; Murry, John Middleton (4 April 1908).
"Review: Lady Jane Grey and Her Times by I. A. Taylor". The Athenaeum (4197): 409–410.