Strickland was born in Kent in 1800. The daughter of Thomas Strickland and Elizabeth (born Homer) of Reydon Hall, Suffolk, Her siblings were Elizabeth; Sarah; Agnes, Catharine Parr, Susanna and Samuel Strickland. All of the children except Sarah eventually became writers.[2]
By 1840 she had two sisters living in Canada and two others who had moved out of the house leaving Jane to look after her mother who died in 1864.[2]
In 1854 Jane published a schoolbook Rome, Regal and Republican: A Family History of Rome that was edited by her sister Agnes.[3] The proceeds made her financially independent and allowed her to buy her own cottage.[2]
In 1856 she published Adonijah[1] which is an unlikely, but engaging, story about a Jewish child living at the time of the Roman Empire who eventually becomes a Christian.[2]
Strickland published a biography of her sister Agnes in 1887 and died at her cottage in Southwold the following year.[citation needed]
Works
Moral Lessons And Stories, From The Proverbs Of Salomon, (c1820)
Rome, Regal And Republican, (1834)
Ellen Cleveland; or, The Young Samaritan, (1834)
James Ellis; or, A Father's Warning Neglected, (1835)
Sacred Minstrelsy; or, Poetry For The Devout [edited], (1838)
The Nameless Grave; and, The Blind Restored To Sight, (1838)
National Prejudice; or, The French Prisoner Of War, (1841)
The Planter's Daughter And Her Slave, (1842)
Edward Evelyn: A Tale Of The Rebellion Of Prince Charles Edward, (1843)
A Memoir Of The Life, Writings...Of Edmund Cartwright, (1843)
The Spanish Conscript And His Family, (1847)
The Orphan Captive; or, Christian Endurance, (1848)
Anne And Jane; or, Good Advice And Good Example, (c1850)
Adonijah: A Tale Of The Jewish Dispersion, (1856)
Christmas Holidays; or, A New Way Of Spending Them, (1864)
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