Caroline Norton (born March 22, 1808, London, England—died June 15, 1877, London) was an English poet and novelist whose matrimonial difficulties prompted successful efforts to secure legal protection for married women.
Granddaughter of the playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan, she began to write while in her teens. The Sorrows of Rosalie (1829) and The Undying One (1830) caused her to be hailed as a female Byron. In 1827 she made an unfortunate marriage to the Honourable George Norton, whom she left in 1835. In retaliation, Norton brought an unsuccessful action against the prime minister, Lord Melbourne, for seducing his wife. Norton then refused his wife access to their children, and her outcries against this injustice were instrumental in introducing the Infant Custody Bill, which was finally carried in 1839. In 1855 she was again involved in a lawsuit because her husband not only refused to pay her allowance but demanded the proceeds of her books. Her eloquent letters of protest to Queen Victoria (English Laws for Women in the Nineteenth Century, 1854; A Letter to the Queen on Lord Chancellor Cranworth’s Marriage and Divorce Bill, 1857) had great influence on the Marriage and Divorce Act of 1857, which abolished some of the inequities to which married women were subject.
She published powerful volumes of verse on social problems: A Voice from the Factories (1836) and The Child of the Islands (1845). She also wrote several novels, two of which, Stuart of Dunleath (1851) and Lost and Saved (1863), are based on her own experience of domestic misery. She is said to have been the model for the heroine of George Meredith’s novel Diana of the Crossways (1885). After her husband’s death in 1875, she married Sir William Stirling-Maxwell.