Tonna, Charlotte Elizabeth (1790–1846)
Tonna, Charlotte Elizabeth (1790–1846)
British novelist and editor. Name variations: Charlotte Elizabeth Browne or (incorrectly) Brown; Mrs. Tonna; Mrs. Phelan; (pseudonyms) Charlotte Elizabeth, C. E. Born Charlotte Elizabeth Browne, Oct 1, 1790, in Norwich, Norfolk, England; died July 12, 1846, in Ramsgate, Kent, England; dau. of Michael Browne (rector); m. George Phelan, 1813 (died 1837); m. Lewis Henry Joseph Tonna, 1841.
Writer of religious-historical novels, children's stories, poems, songs, travel narratives, and social-protest fiction whose works focus on working women, industrialization, and social decay; writings include The Shepherd Boy and the Deluge (1823), Anne Bell: or, the Faults (1826), Little Frank, The Irish Boy (1827), The Burying Ground (1830), A Letter to a Friend, Containing a Few Heads for Consideration, on Subjects that Trouble the Church (1831), The Simple Flower (1840), Helen Fleetwood (1841), Judah's Lion (1843), The Wrongs of Women (1843–44), War with the Saints (1848), Stories for Children (1854) and The Two Servants.