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Susan Elizabeth Gay (born 12 January 1845 in Oswestry, died 17 January 1918 in Crill, Budock) [1][2] was a chronicler of Falmouth in a book published in 1903 entitled Old Falmouth.[3][4]
Miss Susan Gay was the daughter of William Gay (1812–1868) and his wife, Charlotte Grace Elizabeth, born Pedersen [2] and the granddaughter of William Gay, the last Falmouth Agent of the General Post Office Packet Service (Old Falmouth, pp. 139–140, 204–206),[3] who retired in 1842.
She was a friend of the Fox family of Falmouth, who provided some of her material (pp. 149–160, 219–222)[3] and illustrations (George Croker Fox p. 149, Anna Maria Fox p. 151, Robert Were Fox FRS p. 153, Joseph Fox, Senior p. 159). Wilson Fox helped her with the Chronology.[3] In her preface, she acknowledges help from them and other Falmouth notables. She ends the preface
"I should mention that this little work is simply a Collecteana, and has no greater pretension". page x.
Miss Gay was also a writer on Theosophy, sometimes using the non-de-plume "Libra".[5]
She was one of the speakers at a celebration of the thirty-second anniversary of Modern Spiritualism on Sunday 4 April 1880, advertised in The Times.[6]
In 1910 or 1911, she was interviewed by Walter Evans-Wentz concerning folktales heard from the peasants around her home at Crill, near Falmouth, published in The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries.[7][8]
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