Amelia Frances Howard-Gibbon (24 July 1826 – 6 February 1874) was an English teacher and artist known for her talents during the 1860s in Ontario, Canada.
From a family letter, she then taught in an art school in New York before she moved back to England in 1873, to claim an inheritance from her uncle Matthew Howard-Gibbon, and became ill.[2] She died in Lambeth and was buried with her father at Saint Nicholas Churchyard in Arundel.
During Howard-Gibbon's time in Ontario, she created watercolor portraits and sketches of several friends and family members.
)[3] It was finally published in 1966 as An Illustrated Comic Alphabet by Oxford University Press in Toronto (catalogued as a 31-page book)[4] and Henry Z. Walck in New York.
[2] Media related to Amelia Frances Howard-Gibbon at Wikimedia Commons This article about a Canadian writer or poet is a stub.