[9] Carroll dedicated his last novel Sylvie and Bruno to her in 1889: her name appears in a double acrostic poem in the introduction.
[13] In 1899-1900 Bacchus published a fictionalised version of her life in Society, a magazine he was editing.
[7] According to Maggie's father-in-law, William Morton, the sisters were all actresses from a very early age.
He said that Maggie had an amusing diary in rhyme written by Carroll about her visit to Oxford as a young child.
[24] Isa played a small part in the 1949 British film Vote for Huggett, together with her sisters Empsie and Nellie.