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Mary Forbes Evans

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Mary Forbes Evans
Born
Mary Forbes Lander

5 May 1936
Hendon, London, England
Died29 June 2010
Greenwich, London, England
NationalityBritish
Known forco-founder of the Mary Evans Picture Library
SpouseHilary Evans
Children1
Parent(s)Digby Forbes Lander
Norah Doris Caroline Williams

Mary Forbes Evans (née Lander, 5 May 1936 – 29 June 2010) was a British writer, collector and the co-founder, with her husband Hilary Evans, of the Mary Evans Picture Library.

Early life

She was born Caroline Mary Forbes Lander on 5 May 1936 at 8 Cotswold Gardens, Hendon, London, the youngest of four daughters of Digby Forbes Lander (1891–1969), an aircraft works accounts clerk, and his wife, Norah Doris Caroline Lander, née Williams (1898–1970).[1][2] She lived in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, before moving to Southern Rhodesia at the age of seven.[2]

She met her future husband Hilary Agard Evans (1929–2011), an advertising copywriter, and the son of Eric Agard Evans, a schoolmaster, when she was a teenager at a party.[2] They married in 1956.[1]

Career

She had been a collector since childhood, especially of illustrated children's books.[2]

She shared a passion for collecting pictures and images with her husband Hilary Evans, and they explored book fairs, bookshops, used book stalls and markets, purchasing books, prints, photographs, engravings, cartoons, illustrations and assorted ephemera - "anything with an image".[1]

Their "magnificent obsession" soon filled their small flat in Kensington Church Street, so they moved to a small house in Blackheath, in south-east London.[1]

In 1964, they founded the Mary Evans Picture Library, and in 1965, Hilary Evans left his job in advertising to work full-time with her on the library.[2] Eventually the collection of tens of thousands of volumes, with hundreds of thousands of images grew too large for their house, and it moved into the parish hall of All Saints, Blackheath.[2] She embraced technological change and continued to innovate, and by the time of her death they employed 14 people, had a website with nearly one million images and an annual turnover of over £1 million.[2]

Together with Hilary Evans, she wrote several books featuring images from the library, including The Party that Lasted 100 Days: the Late Victorian Season (1976) and The Man who Drew the Drunkard's Daughter: the Life and Art of George Cruikshank (1978).[2] They co-edited The Picture Researchers' Handbook, up until its eighth edition.[2]

Later life

She died on 29 June 2010, at Riverlee Nursing Home, Greenwich.[2] Hilary Evans died on 27 July 2011, and they were survived by their daughter, Valentine Evans.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Mary Evans". The Daily Telegraph. 20 July 2010. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Evans [née Lander], (Caroline) Mary Forbes". ODNB. Retrieved 30 November 2017.