Louisa M. Spooner
{{Short description|Welsh novelist}}
File:Eglwys Sant Cynhaiarn St Cynhaearn's Church, Ynyscynhaearn, Gwynedd North Wales 107.JPG, Ynyscynhaearn. She is buried in the same grave as her parents.]]
Louisa Matilda Spooner, pseudonym L. M. S. (1820 – 5 December 1886), was a Welsh novelist.{{cite web | url= https://omaha.com/lifestyles/evans-from-welsh-roots-gladys-has-worked-its-way-through-the-grapevine/article_2586b69e-733c-5835-bb77-6ce525cde222.html | title= Evans: From Welsh roots, Gladys has worked its way through the grapevine | last= Evans | first= Cleveland Kent | date= 9 October 2018 | website= omaha.com | publisher= Omaha World Herald | access-date= 10 December 2023 | quote = }}{{cite web |title=Author: Louisa Matilda Spooner |url=https://www.victorianresearch.org/atcl/show_author.php?aid=1199 |website=www.victorianresearch.org |access-date=11 December 2023 |language=en}}{{cite web |title=L.M. Spooner Books & Audiobooks |url=https://www.everand.com/author/665905417/L-M-Spooner |website=Everand |access-date=11 December 2023 |language=en}}{{cite web |last=Singer |first=Rita |date=2017 |title=Gladys of Harlech and the Wars of the Roses |url=https://research.aber.ac.uk/cy/activities/gladys-of-harlech-and-the-wars-of-the-roses |access-date=11 December 2023 |website=Porth Ymchwil Aberystwyth |language=en}}
Life
She was born in Maentwrog and baptised on 24 March 1820, as the fifth of eventually ten children of her English parents James Spooner (1790–1856) and his first wife, Elizabeth (née Easton; 1787–1850).{{Cite web |title=FamilySearch.org |url=https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=100&q.batchNumber=C057491&q.surname=spooner&f.collectionId=5 |access-date=2024-03-21 |website=Familysearch.org}} James was a surveyor and engineer and was hired by the Welsh entrepreneur William Madocks (1773–1826) to assist him with his grand land and town development plans.Singer, Rita. "Introduction" in Louisa Matilda Spooner (1860/2025). Country Landlords.
Her older brother Charles Easton Spooner (1818–1889) was the first of her siblings to be born in Wales. By the time the sixth Spooner child, Amelia (1824–1922), arrived, lodgings in Maentwrog became inevitably cramped and the family moved to Plas Tan yr Allt, William Madocks’ spacious former home in Tremadog.
Louisa never married and always stayed close to her family throughout her adult life. After her mother’s death in 1850, her father re-married in the same year, taking Eliza James for his wife. By 1860, Louisa had moved in with her older brother, Charles, and his four children at Bron-y-Garth, Porthmadog, following the death of his wife, Mary. Apart from managing the household and helping him raise his children, little is known of Louisa outside her living arrangements with her brother and her writing activities.
She died in Porthmadog on 5 December 1886 and was buried in the same grave as her parents in the churchyard of St Cynhaearn’s, Ynyscynhaearn. Following her death, Charles financed the installation of a stained-glass window to her memory in St John’s Church, Porthmadog, which is still in place today.
Works
Her works include:
- Gladys of Harlech (1858)
- Country Landlords (1860)
- The Welsh Heiress: A Novel (1868)
In her novels, she focused largely on topics relating to Wales and from a Welsh perspective. In Gladys of Harlech, Spooner used the backdrop of the Wars of the Roses to discuss Welshness in its relation to the English crown.{{Cite journal |last=Singer |first=Rita |date=2015 |editor-last=Lindfield |editor-first=Peter |editor2-last=Margrave |editor2-first=Christie |title=Liberating Britain from Foreign Bondage: A Welsh Revision of the Wars of the Roses in L. M. Spooner's Gladys of Harlech; or, The Sacrifice (1858) |url=https://research.aber.ac.uk/cy/publications/liberating-britain-from-foreign-bondage-a-welsh-revision-of-the-w-2 |journal=Rule Britannia? |pages=143–158}} In Country Landlords, she discussed landownership and republicanism in the nineteenth century, while The Welsh Heiress engages with the impact of alcoholism on farming communities.{{Cite journal |last=Singer |first=Rita |date=2016-12-20 |title=Adapting the Risorgimento: Ideas of Liberal Nationhood in L. M. Spooner's Country Landlords (1860) |url=http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85006886578&partnerID=8YFLogxK |journal=Women's Writing |volume=24 |issue=4 |pages=466–481 |doi=10.1080/09699082.2016.1268342 |issn=0969-9082}}{{Cite thesis |title=Re-inventing the Gwerin: Anglo-Welsh identities in fiction and non-fiction, 1847-1914 |url=https://portal.dnb.de/opac.htm?method=simpleSearch&cqlMode=true&query=idn%3D1264863306 |publisher=Deutsche Nationalbibliothek |date=2022 |place=Leipzig Frankfurt am Main |first=Rita |last=Singer}} All of her novels are set vaguely in Merionethshire, the area where she spent the majority of her life.
Country Landlords prominently features a Black servant, Yarico. The name originates in historic accounts of an enslaved native woman from the West Indies and its subsequent use in abolitionist literature.{{Cite web |last=Singer |first=Rita |title=Black servants in the countryside |url=https://bydbach.hcommons.org/entanglements-of-empire/ |access-date=2025-03-10 |language=en-US}}
Towards the end of her life, she published a serialised short story, ‘Amos Dura: or “The Faithful Friend”’, in the conservative, religious magazine Golden Hours (1884).
References
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Category:19th-century Welsh novelists
Category:Welsh women novelists