Cynthia Stockley


Cynthia Stockley was a best-selling novelist in Britain, America, and Australia known for her romance novels usually set in Rhodesia and South Africa.

Biography

Stockley was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa. Her mother, Mary Ann Webb, emigrated from County Clare in Ireland at the age of 18, in 1859, whilst her father, Abel Arthur Webb, arrived from Northamptonshire, England, in 1861, at the age of 23.
Her mother died when Cynthia was two. Her father subsequently remarried, and Cynthia then lived with four siblings, her step-mother, a half-sister, and two half-brothers. After attending St. Michael's School, Bloemfontein, she moved to live with her sister in Mashonaland.
In 1895 she married Philip Stockley, a member of the Mashonaland Mounted Police, in Salisbury. They moved to Umtali where her daughter Dorothy was born in 1896.
The Stockleys separated later in 1896: she to take up a career in journalism and writing, he to participate in the Boer War. Thinking Philip had been killed in the Boer War, she remarried. Her husband was Joseph Byrne, an Irish doctor in New York; their son Patrick was born there in 1905 pp99.
She also worked as an actress and bought a farm in Rhodesia and a house in Norfolk. In 1916 married Harold Pelham Browne, an officer in the British army serving in Paris pp288.
Stockley died in London in January 1936, having gassed herself in her apartment. Her death was reported in newspapers around the world. The coroner returned a verdict of death by gas poisoning ‘whilst of unsound mind’. She is buried in Sheringham, Norfolk.

Novels

Her 16 books included:
With the advent of silent film several of her books were made into films: