Farningham, Marianne, 1834-1909 (Personal Name)
- Hearn, Mary Anne, 1834-1909
- Hearne, Mary Anne, 1834-1909
- Hope, Eva, 1834-1909
- Author of Our queen, 1834-1909
- Author of Grace Darling, 1834-1909
- Grace Darling, Author of, 1834-1909
- Our queen, Author of, 1834-1909
Eva Hope is a dis-used pseudonym; all this author's works, including her autobiography, are reprinted under Marianne Farningham
Her A working woman's life, 1907: t.p. (Marianne Farningham) p. 11-12 (b. 12/17/1834 in Farningham, England; her father: Joseph Hearn)
LC manual cat., 4/18/85 (memo: real name: Hearn, Mary Anne; d. 1909)
A window in Paris, 1898: t.p. (Marianne Farningham)
RLIN, Nov. 14, 2001 (hdgs.: Farningham, Marianne, 1834-1909; Hearne, Mary Anne, 1834-1909; Farningham, Marianne, pseud. [i.e. Mary Anne Hearne]; Hearne, Mary Anne; Hearn, Mary Anne, 1834-1909; usage: Marianne Farningham)
nuc88-64905: Her New world heroes Lincoln and Garfield [MI] 1888 (hdg. on CtY rept.: Hope, Eva; usage: author of "Our queen," "Grace Darling," etc., etc.)
Communication from British Library, 9 March 2009: (Eva Hope is a dis-used pseudonym; all this author's works, including her autobiography, are reprinted under Marianne Farningham)
The Victorian Web website, 16 Sept. 2013: authors (Marianne Farningham, 1834-1909; author, editor, and lecturer; lived most of her life in Northampton; born Mary Ann [sic] Hearn, her pen name was derived from the Kent village, Farningham, where she grew up; contributed to the evangelical newspaper "Christian world" from its launch in 1857 until shortly before her death in 1909; from 1885, also edited the "Sunday school times", as well as publishing collected editions of her weekly prose pieces, poems, and serialised fiction; Marianne Farningham would have been a household name in many Victorian homes; she also later wrote as Eva Hope)
Oxford DNB online, 16 Sept. 2013 (Mary Anne Hearn (pseud. Marianne Farningham), religious writer; born 17 December 1834 at Farningham, Kent, died 16 March 1909 at Barmouth; her large literary output, coupled with her editorial work, made her one of the most influential women members of the nineteenth-century Baptist church)