Winifred Graham


Winifred Graham was an English novelist and anti-Mormon activist.

Childhood

Born Matilda Winifred Muriel Graham, the daughter of Robert Graham, a wealthy stockbroker, she enjoyed a privileged upbringing in Hampton-on-Thames, displaying literary and dramatic talent from an early age.

Career

Graham's career as an author began in the 1890s. Her short story "Through the Multitude of Business", published in the summer 1894 issue of Belgravia magazine, described the revenge of a beautiful heiress on a man who had taken advantage of her. Her first book-length novel, On the Down Grade, was published in 1896.
Graham was a prolific writer, producing eighty-eight books during her lifetime, as well as several short stories published in newspapers and magazines. In addition to the romantic novels and thrillers which constituted the vast majority of her output, she also wrote a highly critical popular history of Mormonism, two volumes supposedly communicated by her father after his death via automatic writing, and a three-volume autobiography. Between 1908 and 1924, she led a campaign to ban Mormon missionaries from the United Kingdom. Her novel The Love Story of a Mormon was adapted into the silent film Trapped by the Mormons.
In addition to her criticisms of Mormonism, Graham also published works critical of Zionism, Christian Science, Roman Catholicism, and the women's suffrage movement.

Family

In 1906, Graham married Theodore Cory, wealthy son of a Welsh mine-owner. She continued to use the name "Winifred Graham" professionally, but was known as "Mrs Thedore Cory" in other contexts. She died in 1950 after an illness of several months, and was survived by her husband Theodore. They had no children.

Books