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Felicia Skene

Felicia Skene
Born Felicia Mary Frances Skene
(1821-05-23)23 May 1821
Aix-en-Provence, France
Died 6 October 1899(1899-10-06) (aged 78)
Oxford, England
Pen name Erskine Moir
Nationality British

Felicia Mary Frances Skene (1821–1899), also known by the pseudonym Erskine Moir, was a Scottish writer, philanthropist and prison reformer in the Victorian era of Great Britain.

She was the youngest daughter of James Skene of Rubislaw and his wife, Jane Forbes, daughter of Sir William Forbes, sixth baronet of Pitsligo, and was born on 23 May 1821 at Aix-en-Provence. Moving with her family to Edinburgh as a child, she played with the children of the exiled King Charles X of France at Holyrood. Her father was a great friend of Sir Walter Scott, and it is said that Miss Skene as a child used to sit on the great novelist's knee and tell him fairy tales. As a girl she was the guest of Stratford Canning at the embassy at Constantinople; and later was the friend of, among others, Florence Nightingale, Sir John Franklin, E. B. Pusey, Walter Savage Landor and William Edmondstoune Aytoun.

In 1838, the family moved to Greece on account of Mrs. Skene's health. Skene built a villa near Athens, in which they lived for some time. They returned to England in 1845, and lived first at Leamington and afterwards at Oxford.

Miss Skene was a very accomplished woman and devoted to good works. When, in 1854, cholera broke out at Oxford, she took part, under Sir Henry Acland, in organising a band of nurses. Some of them were sent afterwards to the Crimea, and during the war Miss Skene remained in constant correspondence with Miss Nightingale. She took much interest in rescue work in Oxford, working with prostitutes and tramps, and was one of the first 'lady visitors' appointed by the Home Office to visit the prison. Some of her experiences were told in a series of articles in Blackwood's Magazine, published in book form in 1889, and entitled Scenes from a Silent World.


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