Rosalind Murray

Rosalind Murray (1890–1967, aged 76–77) was a British-born writer and novelist known for The Happy Tree and The Leading Note.

[1] During her childhood, Rosalind spent time abroad in Italy for the purposes of her health, as letters written by her father reveal: he wrote to David Murray in 1899 that she was "absolutely forbidden to live in Glasgow or anywhere near.

"[2] When she was three years old her father wrote to her grandmother, "It is a great help she is so intelligent",[3] and he supported her literary activity from an early age.

E.M. Forster wrote of it to Malcolm Darling in 1911, "The best novels I have come across in the past year are Rosalind Murray's The Leading Note [...] and Wedgwood's Shadow of a Titan.

Lawrence (born 1920) married Jean Constance Asquith, grand-daughter of Prime Minister H. H.