Harriet Anne Scott


Harriet Anne Scott, Lady Scott, was a British novelist, born in India, and of Scottish descent.
Scott, only daughter of Henry Shank of Castlerig and Glenniston, Fife and his wife Anna Maria was born in Bombay on 24 March 1816. She was baptized on 20 March 1817. On 28 Nov. 1844 she married Scottish antiquarian and army officer Sir James Sibbald David Scott, third baronet of Dunninald, Forfarshire. According to the 1871 census, the couple appear to have had five of their seven children residing with them; Henrietta, Florence, Maria, Tibbald, and Lillian. Scott died at 18 Cornwall Gardens, Queen's Gate, Kensington, Middlesex on 8 April 1894. Her will proved on 30 July left effects of £6,234 to her son Sir Francis David Sibbald Scott and her daughter Henrietta.
She was described as a highly accomplished woman, who was occasionally confused, due to her title, with contemporary novelist, Caroline Lucy Scott, Lady Scott. Her contemporaries often compared her work to the work of another Scottish novelist, Susan Ferrier.
She wrote the following nine novels, the first five anonymously:
  1. The M.P.'s Wife and the Lady Geraldine, 1838, 2 vols.
  2. The M.D's Daughter: A Novel of the Nineteenth Century, 1842, 2 vols.
  3. The Henpecked Husband, 1847, 3 vols.
  4. Percy, or the Old Love and the New, 1848, 3 vols.
  5. Hylton House and its Inmates, 1850, 3 vols.
  6. The Only Child: a Tale, 1852, 2 vols.
  7. The Pride of Life, 1854, 2 vols.
  8. The Skeleton in the Cupboard, 1860
  9. The Dream of a Life, 1862, 3 vols.
Besides writing these novels, she also contributed to the ‘Queen’ newspaper' among other magazines, and published a small book entitled Cottagers' Comforts, and other Recipes in Knitting and Crochet. By Grandmother, 1887.