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  1. Mary Anne Hearn (17 December 1834 – 16 March 1909) who wrote under the nom de plumes Marianne Farningham in The Christian World and for A Working Woman's Life, Eva Hope, and Marianne Hearn, was a British religious writer of poetry, biographies, prose and hymns.

  2. Marianne Farningham was an author, editor and lecturer who lived most of her life in Northampton. Born Mary Ann Hearn, her pen name was derived from the name of the Kent village, Farningham, in which she grew up.

  3. Mary Ann Hearn, better known as Marianne Farningham, was an English Victorian Baptist who was an educationalist, journalist, and lecturer at a time when women were not expected to enter public life. Mary Anne was a hymn-writer, was born at Farningham, Kent, on 17 Dec. 1834.

  4. English Victorian Baptist who was an educationalist, journalist, and lecturer at a time when women were not expected to enter public life. Name variations: Mary Ann Hearn; Marianne Farningham Hearn; (pseudonym) Eva Hope. Pronunciation: FAR-ningam.

  5. In 1907, aged seventy and nearing the end of her long life as a journalist and writer, Marianne Farningham published her autobiography.

  6. Sep 10, 2008 · Works. Publications under both her own name and a pseudonym. 'God bless our Home' (poem) 'Just as I am, Thine own to be ' (hymn) Passages from Grace Darling. Farningham on work.

  7. Hearn, Marianne, known to the public only by her nom deplume of Marianne Farningham, was born at Farningham, in Kent, Dec. 17, 1834. She resided for short periods at Bristol and Gravesend, and since 1865 at Northampton. Miss Farningham is a member of the Baptist denomination.