Margaret Sheridan, Comtesse de Renéville (1912–1980) was a British writer who wrote under the name Mary Motley. Sheridan was the daughter of sculptor Clare Sheridan.
Life
Her father, Wilfred Sheridan was killed at the Battle of Loos on 25 September 1915. A sister died in infancy. She accompanied her mother to live in America in her early years.
Sheridan spent some time in Biskra, Algeria, where, in 1937, her brother Richard died of appendicitis, aged twenty-one, and she travelled extensively in the Saharan region. In 1935 she married Comte Guy de Renéville, an officer in the French army, and later Chef de Cabinet Militaire to the Governor General of French Equatorial Africa.
She wrote autobiographies about her time in Algeria and the French Congo. Her mother died in 1970. When Margaret died in 1980 her copyrights reverted to Jonathan Frewen, who had inherited her mother's copyrights in 1972 from his father Roger Frewen, who was Clare Sheridan's nephew [Clare Sheridan, Roger Frewen Wills, Somerset House, London, United Kingdom].[1]
Bibliography
References
- ↑ Contact for Clare Sheridan 1885-1970, UTexas, Retrieved 3 October 2016
- ↑ Cade, Elizabeth (12 June 1960). "African cults reach beyond native ground". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 129. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
- ↑ "Mary Motley in the sahara". The Bridgeport Post. 14 April 1963. p. 44. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
External links