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'''Alice Askew''', aka '''Jane de Courcy''', was an author of many stories, including a series of supernatural stories featuring investigator of the supernatural "Aylmer Vance".  Jane de Courcy wrote with her husband, Claude Askew ("Arthur Cary").  
'''Alice Askew''' was a co-author with her husband, Claude Askew, of over ninety stories, including a series of supernatural tales featuring the 'occult' investigator "Aylmer Vance".  After they were married (10 July, 1900) they always wrote together as "Alice and Claude Askew".  Alice had already begun to write before her marriage to Claude. Her first published story was 'A Modern Day Saint. A Slight Sketch of a Priest and a Woman', which appeared in ''Belgravia: A London Magazine'', Vol. 85, London, 1894. This was signed: "By A. J. de C. L."<ref name="Belgravia">Belgravia: A London Magazine, Vol. LXXV, September to December, 1894, London, F.V. White & Co., 14, Bedford Street, Strand, W.C., 1894, pp. 279-287 - facsimile reprint by Nabu Public Domain Reprints, LaVergne, TN, USA, 7 Jan 2011</ref>


: "This now forgotten husband-and-wife team of collaborators wrote many novels and story cycles. Their one series about the supernatural featured an investigator of the occult named Aylmer Vance. The brisk and rather lightweight stories are narrated by Vance's admiring dogsbody and chronicler, Mr. Dexter, in a Holmes and Watson sort of way. Vance himself, in his attention to the vast gray area beyond the purview of Holmes, is reminiscent of two earlier detectives in this vein, [[William Hope Hodgson]]'s [[Carnacki the Ghost Finder]] and [[Algernon Blackwood]]'s [[John Silence]]."<ref name="sims">Michael Sims, "Alice and Claude Askew (Jane de Courcy, 1874-1917, and Arthur Cary, 1866-1917)," ''Dracula's Guest: A Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Vampire Stories'' (p.423.)</ref>
: "This now forgotten husband-and-wife team of collaborators wrote many novels and story cycles. Their one series about the supernatural featured an investigator of the occult named Aylmer Vance. The brisk and rather lightweight stories are narrated by Vance's admiring dogsbody and chronicler, Mr. Dexter, in a Holmes and Watson sort of way. Vance himself, in his attention to the vast gray area beyond the purview of Holmes, is reminiscent of two earlier detectives in this vein, [[William Hope Hodgson]]'s [[Carnacki the Ghost Finder]] and [[Algernon Blackwood]]'s [[John Silence]]."<ref name="sims">Michael Sims, "Alice and Claude Askew (Jane de Courcy, 1874-1917, and Arthur Cary, 1866-1917)," ''Dracula's Guest: A Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Vampire Stories'' (p.423.)</ref>


Alice was born on June 18th, 1874 at her parents' home, No. 3 Westbourne Street, Kensington, London.  She was baptised 'Alice Jane de Courcy' at St. Michael and all Angels, Paddington on August 5th, 1874. Her father was - at the time of her birth - Captain Henry Leake, on half pay, late of the 70th Regiment of Foot. Captain Leake had married Jane Dashwood on July 16, 1873 at the the same St. Michael and All Angels Church in Paddington.  Jane was the only child and daughter of Charles James Augustus Dashwood, who had served with the East India Company in its Bengal Cavalry, from which he retired with the rank of Captain in 1822. Henry Leake, whose father John Leake was a merchant from Liverpool, would subsequently serve with the East Yorkshire Regiment and retire in 1882 with the honorary rank of Lieutenant-Colonel.  Alice was the eldest child of three.  Her brother was Henry Dashwood Stukley Leake, who was known by his niece Jill Askew, as "Uncle Stukley".  And her sister was Francis Beatrice Levine Leake, who sadly died when only six years old in 1884.
There are a few 'sources' online and elsewhere which suggest that her names 'Jane de Courcy' were some kind of pseudonym or ''nom-de-plume''.  This is not the case. They are her middle Christian names.  'Jane' she got from her mother, Jane née Dashwood; and 'de Courcy' presumably from the same Dashwood family through her great uncle Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Dashwood, K.C.B., G.C.T.S., who had married the Hon. Elizabeth de Courcy, daughter of John de Courcy, the 26th Baron Kingsale. They named their second son: 'John de Courcy', who in turned named his two sons: De Courcy Pitcairn, Francis Dundas de Courcy. And Francis Dundas de Courcy Dashwood, continued the use of this now 'family name' with his son: Francis (Frank) John de Courcy; and two daughters: Coventry de Courcy, and Maud de Courcy.  These last were contemporaries of their cousin Alice Jane de Courcy Leake. 
Alice Jane de Courcy Leake was married to Claude Arthur Cary Askew on July 10th, 1900 at Christ Church, Lancaster Gate in Paddington, London.
: A PICTURESQUE WEDDING: 
:: "There was a large and fashionable congregation on Tuesday afternoon at Christ Church, Lancaster Gate, to witness the marriage of Mr. Claude Arthur Cary Askew, second son of the late Rev. John Askew, M.A., to Miss Alice Jane de Courcey Leake, only surviving daughter of the late Lieut.-Colonel Henry Leake, late 44th and 70th Regiments, and of Mrs. Leake, 3, Westbourne Street, Hyde Park.  The bridegroom, who is the proprietor of the Anglo-American Exchange, of London, New York, and Paris, has a host of friends and acquaintances among American visitors now in London, many of whom were present at the ceremony. ...."<ref name="A PICTURESQUE WEDDING">Newspaper clipping, showing neither the name of the newspaper nor the date it was published, under the heading: A PICTURESQUE WEDDING (now in the possession of Robin Cary Askew - previously in that of Gilian (Jill) Askew, youngest daughter of Alice Askew)</ref>


: "Claude Arthur Cary Askew was born in Notting Hill, London, in 1866, the second son of Reverend John Askew, M.A. Educated at Eton and on the continent, Askew married Alice Jane de Courcey Leake (born St. Pancras, London, 1874, the daughter of Colonel Henry Leake) in 1900 and the pair became industrious writers of stories and serials. ... On October 17, 1917, they were aboard a ship in the Mediterranean which was attacked by an enemy submarine. Both were recorded as having drowned at sea.  The couple were survived by a son and a daughter. In more peaceful times they had lived in Wivelsfield Green, near Burgess Hill in Sussex."<ref name="holland">Holland (2007).</ref>
: "Claude Arthur Cary Askew was born in Notting Hill, London, in 1866, the second son of Reverend John Askew, M.A. Educated at Eton and on the continent, Askew married Alice Jane de Courcey Leake (born St. Pancras, London, 1874, the daughter of Colonel Henry Leake) in 1900 and the pair became industrious writers of stories and serials. ... On October 17, 1917, they were aboard a ship in the Mediterranean which was attacked by an enemy submarine. Both were recorded as having drowned at sea.  The couple were survived by a son and a daughter. In more peaceful times they had lived in Wivelsfield Green, near Burgess Hill in Sussex."<ref name="holland">Holland (2007).</ref>
Alice & Claude Askew – always as co-authors after their marriage – wrote more than ninety stories, which were published variously in books, novelettes or novellas in popular magazines or ‘weeklies’. In volume 46 of ''The Review of Reviews'', published in 1912, there is a review of an article from another magazine, ''Woman at Home'':
: 'WIVES WHO WORK WITH THEIR HUSBANDS'
::"Rudolph de Cordova sketches in ''Woman at Home'' the activities of several famous wives and their husbands. Mrs. Ayrton, Lady Huggins, and Madame Curie, together with their husbands, were discoverers in the realms of science. The bulk of the article is, however, devoted to co-workers in the field of literature. Mr. and Mrs. Askew, Mr. and Mrs. Williamson, Mr. and Mrs. Egerton Castle, and Mr. and Mrs. Leighton will be familiar, through their work, to the novel reader. Mr. and Mrs. Askew had only had one story each published before their marriage. They went on working along their own individual lines for about a year:—
::"Mr. Askew was doing a lot of writing for ''Household Words'', which was then under the proprietorship of Mr. Hall Caine, and naturally Mrs. Askew took a great deal of interest in it. About a year after they had been married it occurred to them that it would be pleasant to work together, since their tastes were so strikingly similar. They began with short stories, in which they have been as successful as they have been prolific, and contributed practically a new story every week to ''Household Words''. A little later they thought they would try their hands at serial stories. The first one they did was accepted and was published in the ''Evening News'' under the title of "Gilded London." So great was its success that they received orders for a second.
::"Both Mr. and Mrs. Askew dream the plots on which many of their stories are founded:—
::One of these was "The Baxter Family." So marked is this gift that when they want a plot for a new story it is no unusual thing for Mrs. Askew to say to herself on going to bed: "You will wake up to-morrow with your plot," and she does. It must, however, be told immediately, or it would be forgotten. These plots are always rapidly written down, and it has happened over and over again that the plot for a long serial has been practically set down in one sitting."<ref name="The Review of Reviews">The Review of Reviews, London: Office of the Review of Reviews, Vol. 46, 1912, p. 452> 


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==

Revision as of 09:31, 19 October 2011

Alice Askew was a co-author with her husband, Claude Askew, of over ninety stories, including a series of supernatural tales featuring the 'occult' investigator "Aylmer Vance". After they were married (10 July, 1900) they always wrote together as "Alice and Claude Askew". Alice had already begun to write before her marriage to Claude. Her first published story was 'A Modern Day Saint. A Slight Sketch of a Priest and a Woman', which appeared in Belgravia: A London Magazine, Vol. 85, London, 1894. This was signed: "By A. J. de C. L."[1]

"This now forgotten husband-and-wife team of collaborators wrote many novels and story cycles. Their one series about the supernatural featured an investigator of the occult named Aylmer Vance. The brisk and rather lightweight stories are narrated by Vance's admiring dogsbody and chronicler, Mr. Dexter, in a Holmes and Watson sort of way. Vance himself, in his attention to the vast gray area beyond the purview of Holmes, is reminiscent of two earlier detectives in this vein, William Hope Hodgson's Carnacki the Ghost Finder and Algernon Blackwood's John Silence."[2]

Alice was born on June 18th, 1874 at her parents' home, No. 3 Westbourne Street, Kensington, London. She was baptised 'Alice Jane de Courcy' at St. Michael and all Angels, Paddington on August 5th, 1874. Her father was - at the time of her birth - Captain Henry Leake, on half pay, late of the 70th Regiment of Foot. Captain Leake had married Jane Dashwood on July 16, 1873 at the the same St. Michael and All Angels Church in Paddington. Jane was the only child and daughter of Charles James Augustus Dashwood, who had served with the East India Company in its Bengal Cavalry, from which he retired with the rank of Captain in 1822. Henry Leake, whose father John Leake was a merchant from Liverpool, would subsequently serve with the East Yorkshire Regiment and retire in 1882 with the honorary rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. Alice was the eldest child of three. Her brother was Henry Dashwood Stukley Leake, who was known by his niece Jill Askew, as "Uncle Stukley". And her sister was Francis Beatrice Levine Leake, who sadly died when only six years old in 1884.

There are a few 'sources' online and elsewhere which suggest that her names 'Jane de Courcy' were some kind of pseudonym or nom-de-plume. This is not the case. They are her middle Christian names. 'Jane' she got from her mother, Jane née Dashwood; and 'de Courcy' presumably from the same Dashwood family through her great uncle Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Dashwood, K.C.B., G.C.T.S., who had married the Hon. Elizabeth de Courcy, daughter of John de Courcy, the 26th Baron Kingsale. They named their second son: 'John de Courcy', who in turned named his two sons: De Courcy Pitcairn, Francis Dundas de Courcy. And Francis Dundas de Courcy Dashwood, continued the use of this now 'family name' with his son: Francis (Frank) John de Courcy; and two daughters: Coventry de Courcy, and Maud de Courcy. These last were contemporaries of their cousin Alice Jane de Courcy Leake.

Alice Jane de Courcy Leake was married to Claude Arthur Cary Askew on July 10th, 1900 at Christ Church, Lancaster Gate in Paddington, London.

A PICTURESQUE WEDDING:
"There was a large and fashionable congregation on Tuesday afternoon at Christ Church, Lancaster Gate, to witness the marriage of Mr. Claude Arthur Cary Askew, second son of the late Rev. John Askew, M.A., to Miss Alice Jane de Courcey Leake, only surviving daughter of the late Lieut.-Colonel Henry Leake, late 44th and 70th Regiments, and of Mrs. Leake, 3, Westbourne Street, Hyde Park. The bridegroom, who is the proprietor of the Anglo-American Exchange, of London, New York, and Paris, has a host of friends and acquaintances among American visitors now in London, many of whom were present at the ceremony. ...."[3]
"Claude Arthur Cary Askew was born in Notting Hill, London, in 1866, the second son of Reverend John Askew, M.A. Educated at Eton and on the continent, Askew married Alice Jane de Courcey Leake (born St. Pancras, London, 1874, the daughter of Colonel Henry Leake) in 1900 and the pair became industrious writers of stories and serials. ... On October 17, 1917, they were aboard a ship in the Mediterranean which was attacked by an enemy submarine. Both were recorded as having drowned at sea. The couple were survived by a son and a daughter. In more peaceful times they had lived in Wivelsfield Green, near Burgess Hill in Sussex."[4]

Alice & Claude Askew – always as co-authors after their marriage – wrote more than ninety stories, which were published variously in books, novelettes or novellas in popular magazines or ‘weeklies’. In volume 46 of The Review of Reviews, published in 1912, there is a review of an article from another magazine, Woman at Home:

'WIVES WHO WORK WITH THEIR HUSBANDS'
"Rudolph de Cordova sketches in Woman at Home the activities of several famous wives and their husbands. Mrs. Ayrton, Lady Huggins, and Madame Curie, together with their husbands, were discoverers in the realms of science. The bulk of the article is, however, devoted to co-workers in the field of literature. Mr. and Mrs. Askew, Mr. and Mrs. Williamson, Mr. and Mrs. Egerton Castle, and Mr. and Mrs. Leighton will be familiar, through their work, to the novel reader. Mr. and Mrs. Askew had only had one story each published before their marriage. They went on working along their own individual lines for about a year:—
"Mr. Askew was doing a lot of writing for Household Words, which was then under the proprietorship of Mr. Hall Caine, and naturally Mrs. Askew took a great deal of interest in it. About a year after they had been married it occurred to them that it would be pleasant to work together, since their tastes were so strikingly similar. They began with short stories, in which they have been as successful as they have been prolific, and contributed practically a new story every week to Household Words. A little later they thought they would try their hands at serial stories. The first one they did was accepted and was published in the Evening News under the title of "Gilded London." So great was its success that they received orders for a second.
"Both Mr. and Mrs. Askew dream the plots on which many of their stories are founded:—
One of these was "The Baxter Family." So marked is this gift that when they want a plot for a new story it is no unusual thing for Mrs. Askew to say to herself on going to bed: "You will wake up to-morrow with your plot," and she does. It must, however, be told immediately, or it would be forgotten. These plots are always rapidly written down, and it has happened over and over again that the plot for a long serial has been practically set down in one sitting."<ref name="The Review of Reviews">The Review of Reviews, London: Office of the Review of Reviews, Vol. 46, 1912, p. 452>


Bibliography

Bibliography sourced from Steve Holland's blog.[4]

Fiction
  • The Shulamite. London, Chapman & Hall, 1904. (first publication)
  • Eve – and the Law. London, Chapman & Hall, 1905.
  • The Premier’s Daughter. London, F. V. White & Co., 1905.
  • Anna of the Plains. London, F. V. White & Co., 1906 [1905].
  • The Etonian. London, F. V. White & Co., 1906.
  • Jennifer Pontefract. London, Hurst & Blackett, 1906.
  • The Baxter Family. London, F. V. White & Co., 1907 [1906].
  • The Love-Stone. London, Sisley’s, 1907.
  • Lucy Gort. A study in temperament. London, F. V. White & Co., 1907.
  • Out of the Running. London, Everett & Co., 1907.
  • The Plains of Silence. London, Cassell & Co., 1907.
  • The Sword of Peace. The story of a secret society. London, Everett & Co., 1907.
  • Not Proven. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1908.
  • The Orchard Close. London, Hurst & Blackett, 1908.
  • The Path of Lies. London, F. V. White & Co., 1908.
  • The Tempting of Paul Chester. London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1908.
  • The Blue Diamond. London, C. H. White, 1909.
  • The Devil and the Crusader. London, F. V. White, 1909.
  • Felix Stone. London, Everett & Co., 1909.
  • John Heriot’s Wife. London, F. V. White & Co., 1909.
  • Testimony. London, Chapman & Hall, 1909; abridged, London, George Newnes (Sevenpenny Novels 24), 1921.
  • Behind Shuttered Windows. London. C. H. White, 1910.
  • Fate – and Drusilla. London, Everett & Co., 1910.
  • The Quest of El Dorado. London, Cassell & Co., 1910.
  • The Rod of Justice. London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1910.
  • Scarlet Town. London, C. H. White, 1910.
  • The Sporting Chance. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1910.
  • Destiny. London, Hurst & Blackett, 1911.
  • Helen of the Moor. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1911.
  • The House Next Door. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1911.
  • Kitty Shafton – Swindler. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1911.
  • The Pearl of Great Price. London, F. V. White & Co., 1911.
  • A Society Marriage. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1911.
  • The Stolen Lady. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1911.
  • The Woman Deborah. London, Eveleigh Nash, 1911.
  • The Apache. London, Everett & Co., 1912.
  • Barbara. London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1912.
  • Bess of Bentley’s. A true shop-girl story. London, F. V. White & Co., 1912.
  • The Dream Daughter. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1912.
  • The Englishwoman. London, Cassell & Co., 1912.
  • In Lovers’ Lane. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1912.
  • The King’s Signature. London, Chapman & Hall, 1912.
  • The Lily and the Devil. London, Everett & Co., 1912.
  • Outlaw Jess. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1912.
  • The Actor Manager. London, George Newnes, 1913.
  • God’s Clay. London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1913.
  • The Golden Girl. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1913.
  • Milly the Actress. London, Aldine Publishing Co. (Mascot Novels 2), 1913.
  • The Mystery of Helmsley Grange. London, C. A. Pearson, 1913.
  • Poison. London, Everleigh Nash, 1913.
  • A Preacher of the Lord. London, Cassell & Co., 1913.
  • A Scarlet Sin. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1913.
  • Souls Adrift. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1913.
  • Araby’s Husband. London, Hurst & Blackett, 1914.
  • By Order of the King. London, Aldine Publishing Co. (Goodship Sixpennies), 1914.
  • Freedom. London, Hurst & Blackett, 1914.
  • Gilded London. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1914.
  • In Strange Shoes. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1914.
  • The Legacy. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1914.
  • Love the Jester. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1914.
  • Through Folly’s Mill. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1914.
  • The Golden Quest. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915; abridged, London, Aldine (Novels 8), 1924.
  • Her Mother’s Child. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915.
  • The Lurking Shadow. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915.
  • Master and Man. London, Aldine Publishing Co. (Mascot Novels 22), 1915
  • The Missing Million. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915.
  • The Tocsin. A romance of the Great War. London, John Long, 1915.
  • Trespass. London, Chapman & Hall, 1915.
  • The Weavers. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915.
  • Wild Sheba. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1915.
  • The Footlight Glare. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1916.
  • Her Father’s Daughter. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1916.
  • Nurse. London, Hodder & Stoughton, 1916.
  • The Garment of Immortality. London, John Long, 1917.
  • The Inscrutable Miss Stone. London, John Long, 1917.
  • The Lost Idol. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1917.
  • The Paignton Honour. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1917.
  • Salvation. London, Chapman & Hall, 1917.
  • The Bride in Black. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1918.
  • Lady Borradale’s Ordeal. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1918.
  • The Ordeal of Ann Curtis. London, Jarrolds, 1918.
  • The Telephone Girl. London, Ward, Lock & Co., 1918.
  • The Work of Herr Hands. London, Chapman & Hall, 1918.
  • The Secret Pathway. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1919.
  • The Yellow Yoke. London, Aldine Publishing Co. (Goodship Sixpennies), 1919.
  • The Grip of Sin. London, Lloyds, 1920.
  • Lavender’s Inheritance. London, United Press, 1922.
  • Evelyn. London, John Long, 1923.
  • Her Empty Triumph. London, J. Leng & Co. (People’s Friend Library 162), 1926.
  • A Woman’s World. London, J. Leng & Co. (People’s Friend Library 170), 1926.
  • A Deadly Revenge. London & Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1934.
Non-fiction
  • The Stricken Land. Serbia as we saw it. London, Everleigh Nash Co., 1916.

References

Notes

  1. Belgravia: A London Magazine, Vol. LXXV, September to December, 1894, London, F.V. White & Co., 14, Bedford Street, Strand, W.C., 1894, pp. 279-287 - facsimile reprint by Nabu Public Domain Reprints, LaVergne, TN, USA, 7 Jan 2011
  2. Michael Sims, "Alice and Claude Askew (Jane de Courcy, 1874-1917, and Arthur Cary, 1866-1917)," Dracula's Guest: A Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Vampire Stories (p.423.)
  3. Newspaper clipping, showing neither the name of the newspaper nor the date it was published, under the heading: A PICTURESQUE WEDDING (now in the possession of Robin Cary Askew - previously in that of Gilian (Jill) Askew, youngest daughter of Alice Askew)
  4. 4.0 4.1 Holland (2007).