Lady Rachel Simon (néeSalaman; 1 August 1823 – 7 July 1899) was an EnglishJewish author.
Biography
Lady Rachel Simon was born in 1823, the fifth daughter of Alice (née Cowen) and Simeon Kensington Salaman.[1][2] Her father was clothing supplier to the British Army and warden of the Western Synagogue,[3] and she was the sister of Annette, Charles, and Julia, and Rose Emma Salaman.[4] Lady Simon grew up amid the intellectual and refined surroundings of a home which was the rendezvous of many distinguished people.
On 12 July 1843, she married barrister John Simon, who would later serve as Serjeant-at-Law and LiberalMember of Parliament.[5] A month after their marriage, the young couple left England for Jamaica, and on arrival there took up their residence in Spanish Town.[6] Their daughter Zillah was born in 1844, the first of eight children, not long before the family immigrated to England when Rachel's health suffered in the tropical climate.[7] They lived for a number of years in Wavertree, Liverpool and settled in London in 1856.[6]
Lady Simon kept from her seventeenth year a diary, from which she published a selection covering a period of fifty years under the title Records and Reflections. The book, with which Lady Simon sought "to remove some of the prevailing misconceptions in regard to [her] ancestral religion," was released in 1894 to favourable reviews.[8][9] She wrote also a work on the Psalms, entitled Beside the Still Waters (1899).[10]
She died in London on 7 July 1899. Lady Simon was outlived by her five surviving children—two sons and three daughters.[11] Her son Oswald John Simon (1855–1932) was a prominent communal worker and author, who served as member of the Council of the Anglo-Jewish Association from 1882 to 1911, and then as vice-president until his death.[12]