Background
Marianne Edwardine Fannin was born in Dublin on 2 March 1845, the daughter of Thomas and Ellen Fannin.
Marianne Edwardine Fannin was born in Dublin on 2 March 1845, the daughter of Thomas and Ellen Fannin.
She was regarded as one of the principle South African botanical artists of her time. When Fannin was a few months old, her family emigrated from Dublin to South Africa. Initially they loved on the Cape of Good Hope.
They then took up residence on the Dargle, a tributary of the Umgeni River, and it was named after a stream near Dublin by Fannin"s father.
The local district is now know by the name Dargle. Fannin first married Reverend Eustace Wilberforce Jacob in 1869.
The couple travelled to England in 1871, with Jacob dying soon after their arrival. Fannin remained in England for a period, studying music and painting.
She returned to South Africa in 1875.
From 1878, she lived in Transvaal, marrying Reverend Alfred Roberts in 1879 whom she met through a mission party. Roberts later went on to become Archdeacon. The couple lived in Potchefstroom from 1881 to 1896, where they had two sons.
Their son, Doctor Austin Roberts, went on to become an eminent ornithologist.
In 1881, during the siege of Pretoria, Fannin returned to the family home in Natal. Fannin died on 18 November 1938, either in Heidelberg, Gauteng, or at New Muckleneuk, Pretoria.
Fannin appears to have been a self-taught artist. Their interest lay primarily in orchids and Asclepiadoideae (milkweeds).
This interest led to Fannin pressing and painting the plants George collected and sending the illustrations to William Henry Harvey at Trinity College, Dublin.
Harvey was so impressed by her paintings, he named an orchid in her honour, crediting her as its discoverer. Around 1869, Fannin painted an album detailing the flowers of Natal. Whilst living in Transvaal, Fannin painted wildflowers and landscapes.
Her flower paintings are held by the School of Botany, Trinity College, Dublin.
Her landscapes are held in private collections in South Africa. Disperis fanniniae Harvard
1863
Sisyranthus fanniniae North.E. Branch Streptocarpus fanniniae Harvard
Ex C. B. Citation Index.
Fannin was one of the founding member of Street Mary"s Diocesan School of Girls, and Roberts served as headmaster of the boys" school Street Birinus"son In 1878, Fannin was a member of a mission party led by Bishop Bousfield, and during their journey from Durban to Pretoria Fannin made sketches of the surrounding countryside.