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Anne Mozley
Anne Mozley (1809–1891) was an English author 〔Albert Frederick Pollard. ''Anne Mozley'' Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 39. p. 249.〕 who lived in Derby and the small village of Barrow-upon-Trent, which is south of the city.〔 She has been described as an almost anonymous author, as few of her works were attributed to her on first publication. She is credited with the first review of George Eliot's book, ''Adam Bede'', that recognized that it had to be written by a woman.〔(Sister as Journalist: The Almost Anonymous Career of Anne Mozley ), Ellen Jordan, Victorian Periodicals Review, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Fall, 2004), pp. 315-341, Published by: Research Society for Victorian Periodicals〕 ==Background== Anne Mozley was born on 17 September 1809 in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire〔 into a family of established book-sellers, publishers and printers, including her brothers Thomas and James Bowling Mozley. Her family moved whilst she was still a child to Derby where she was educated at home.〔Ellen Jordan, ‘Mozley, Anne (1809–1891)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 (accessed 17 November 2014 )〕 Mozley was known as an educated and religiously interested individual. After taking over her brother Thomas's house, she dedicated her time to literary and written works, many of which she published between 1843 and 1849. She then edited books for the ''Christian Remembrancer.'' Mozley continued to write and publish works until her death in 1891.〔 She became blind two years before her death. However, she was remembered for her many writings, particularly because her sister Fanny republished many of her earlier essays that had been published without attribution. Computer analysis has identified further works which were known to exist but could not be otherwise identified.
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