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Margaret Armstrong (1) (1867–1944)

Author of Fanny Kemble, a Passionate Victorian

For other authors named Margaret Armstrong, see the disambiguation page.

7+ Works 282 Members 4 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Margaret Armstrong (1867-1944) was born in New York to a wealthy family. She was a prolific book cover designer, and her design work has been the focus of several major exhibits and is widely collected today. She is the author of Fanny Kemble, A Passionate Victorian and Trelawny, A Man's Life as show more well as three murder mysteries. show less

Works by Margaret Armstrong

Field Book of Western Wildflowers (1915) — Writer & illustrator — 75 copies, 1 review
Trelawny (1940) 62 copies, 1 review
Murder in Stained Glass (1939) 42 copies, 2 reviews
The Man With No Face (2015) 9 copies

Associated Works

Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850) — Illustrator, some editions — 2,443 copies, 31 reviews
The Rosary (1909) — Cover designer, some editions — 206 copies, 7 reviews
The Blue Flower (1902) — Cover designer, some editions — 139 copies, 3 reviews
How to Know the Ferns (1899) — Cover designer, some editions — 129 copies
Tommy and Grizel (1900) — Cover designer, some editions — 125 copies, 2 reviews
Sentimental Tommy (1896) — Cover designer, some editions — 117 copies, 1 review
Out-of-doors in the Holy Land: impressions of travel in body and spirit (1908) — Cover designer, some editions — 75 copies
The Ruling Passion (1977) — Cover designer, some editions — 66 copies, 1 review
Pippa Passes (2009) — Cover artist, some editions — 63 copies, 3 reviews
Days Off (1907) — Cover designer, some editions — 62 copies
The Unknown Quantity (2005) — Cover designer, some editions — 48 copies
Master of the Vineyard (1910) — Cover designer, some editions — 41 copies, 2 reviews
A Weaver of Dreams (1911) — Cover designer, some editions — 39 copies
The Man on the Box (1904) — Cover designer, some editions — 34 copies
The Valley of Vision (2002) — Cover designer, some editions — 30 copies
Wanted - A Matchmaker (1902) — Cover designer, some editions — 27 copies
Gordon Keith (2005) — Cover designer, some editions — 23 copies, 1 review
Candle-Lightin' Time (1901) — Illustrator; Cover artist/designer, some editions — 23 copies
The Old Gentleman of the Black Stock (1897) — Cover designer, some editions — 22 copies
The Sherrods (2012) — Cover designer, some editions — 18 copies, 1 review
Love finds the way (1904) — Cover designer, some editions; Decorations, some editions — 17 copies, 2 reviews
The Golden Key (1921) — Cover designer, some editions — 14 copies
Unleavened Bread (1900) — Cover designer, some editions — 13 copies
Family Treasury of Great Biographies Volume 10 (1971) — Contributor — 12 copies
Under the Crust (1907) — Cover designer, some editions — 11 copies
Rose of Old Harpeth (1911) — Cover designer, some editions — 8 copies
Tales of the Maine coast (1894) — Binding Designer., some editions — 4 copies, 1 review

Tagged

1st (2) Binding (3) biography (42) botany (9) British (4) crime (2) ebook (8) England (3) Fanny Kemble (3) feminism (2) fiction (4) field guides (4) First Edition (3) flowers (4) gardening (3) Georgia (3) history (6) Kindle (3) lit (3) literature (5) MA (3) mystery (8) natural history (4) non-fiction (9) theatre (4) to-read (6) US (4) Victorian (6) wildflowers (7) women (5)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Armstrong, Margaret Neilson
Birthdate
1867-09-24
Date of death
1944-07-18
Gender
female
Occupations
illustrator
mystery writer
biographer
Relationships
Armstrong, Hamilton Fish (brother)
Armstrong, Maitland (father)
Short biography
Margaret Armstrong was born in New York City to a wealthy family and was among a number of important woman cover designers, beginning her work in the late 1880s. She began her career at A.C. McClurg and then went on to other publishers, primarily Scribner's, for whom she designed half of her total output of about 270 books. Armstrong also specialized in designing many of the works of a few authors including Myrtle Reed, Henry Van Dyke, Paul Bourget, and Paul Laurence Dunbar.

On a trip to the US west, she took careful notes on the wild flowers she saw and published them in a field guide. Toward the end of her career, she also authored several mysteries, two biographies -- including Fanny Kemble, A Passionate Victorian (1938) -- and edited her family's papers.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, New York, USA

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
This is classic 1930's biography that, while not as scholarly as modern works breathes life into the story. It is based heavily on Trelawney's (a charasmatic braggart and truth-stretcher) autobiography. Clearly, Armstrong admired him. I loved the man as well after reading this. This is a fascinating almost unbelievable biography about Edward Trelawny. As a family the Trelawnys were always courageous, adventurous, full of vitality, eccentric, unreliable, prone to extremes - and Edward was show more true to the tradition. While still a very young man, sailing in he Indian Ocean under the French flag, he captured a pirate town in Madagascar. He rescued the daughter of an Arab sheik and married her, only to lose her by poisoning. He told her a story in his famous "Adventures of a Younger son."

In Italy, Trelawny's friendship with Shelley ripened into the greatest experience of his life. After Shelley's tragic death, it was Trelawny who undertook the burning of his body on the beach near Via Reggio.

Fighting, with Byron, for the freedom of Greece; living in a cave on Mount Atlas with a Greek chieftain' visiting America, where he bought a slave in order to set him free - these were some of the other highlights of his career. Hardy and handsome to the last, he died at eighty-one, and at his request his ashes were buried beside those of Shelley in Rome. Ardent alike in friendship, passion, and love of freedom, Edward Trelawny lived a life of almost incredible adventure. And his biographer brings out all of his dramatic color. Exciting reading.
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The body of a local glass artist is discovered while Miss Harriet Trumbull is staying with her friend Charlotte Blair at Bassett's Bridge. Her interest is piqued and she starts to investigate.
An enjoyable mystery, original written in 1939.
A classic mystery from the 1930s, quite enjoyable with some surprises. The author, Margaret Armstrong, lived from 1867 to 1944. She was mostly known as an illustrator and designer but she wrote several mysteries in the 30s. She was best known for being the illustrator of a field guide to wildflowers and the designer of book covers. I may be looking for some of her other works.

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Statistics

Works
7
Also by
29
Members
282
Popularity
#82,538
Rating
4.0
Reviews
4
ISBNs
25
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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