Agnes Romilly White (1872–1945) was an Irish novelist who wrote about the poverty, bereavement and comedy that she saw around her.
[2] Her father was the rector of St. Elizabeth's Church of Ireland and was based in Dundonald, from 1890 to 1912.
[1][3] White made the small village and the cottages famous in her books.
One of her brothers was Herbert Martin Oliver White, a lecturer at Queen's University was appointed to the Chair of English at Trinity College Dublin over the poet Austin Clarke.
[5] She was thought to be an excellent observer of people and criticism of her appeared in Punch and The Observer:[6] ‘The lilt of the dialogue goes to one's head like wine: the spell is laid upon one as soon as any character chose to open his mount.'