ELIZABETH GASKELL (1810β1865) was born Elizabeth Stevenson in London, the daughter of a Unitarian minister who resigned his position on conscientious grounds. Her mother died a year after her birth, and Gaskell spent her formative years in the care of relatives in northern England. In 1832, she married William Gaskell, a well-known Unitarian minister, and joined him to work among the poor for social reform. They had four daughters, as well as a son who died in infancy. His death left Gaskell so distraught that she began writing for distraction. Her first major success was the novel Mary Barton (1848)βpublished, as were her first several works of short fiction, under the pseudonym Cotton Mather Mills. For many years, she also wrote regularly for Charles Dickensβs magazine, Household Words, contributing stories and a serialized novel, Cranford. Meanwhile, the Gaskellsβ home in Manchester became a popular stop for writers and reformers, including Dickens, Harriet Beecher Stowe, John Ruskin, and Charlotte BrontΓ«, who became a close friend. After BrontΓ«βs death, her father, Patrick BrontΓ«, asked Gaskell to write her biography. The Life of Charlotte BrontΓ« proved a pioneering and controversial psychological study of BrontΓ«βs family life, and remains perhaps the most important book on the writer. Gaskell died of a heart attack in 1865. A memorial to her lies at Poetsβ Corner in Westminster Abbey.