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Frances Parkinson Keyes
(1885–1970)
Frances Parkinson Keyes in 1925. Learn more »
Frances Parkinson Keyes was born in Virginia, grew up in Vermont and Boston, and
lived most of her adult life in and around Washington, D.C., but her fiction and historic
restorations link her firmly to Louisiana. The author of several best-selling novels, Keyes is perhaps best
known for her 1948 murder mystery, Dinner at Antoine’s, which is set in New Orleans. Also famous for
her gracious hospitality, Keyes meticulously restored a French Quarter home, now known as the
Beauregard-Keyes House, to entertain her many guests. She was an advocate for historic preservation and
restoration throughout her life.
Early Life
Born in Charlottesville, Virginia, on July 21, 1885, Frances Parkinson Wheeler was the child of John Henry
Wheeler and Louise Fuller Johnson Wheeler. After her father, a professor of Greek, died in 1887, her
mother returned to their native New England. Keyes’ education was largely informal, but she acquired
considerable linguistic skills as well as a deep appreciation for living in historic homes. When she was
eighteen, she married Henry Keyes, a man of forty, who became governor of New Hampshire in 1916 and
later served as U.S. senator until shortly before his death in 1938. Frances Keyes spent the early years of
her marriage raising their three sons, and despite her husband’s disapproval of her writing ambitions, she
managed to publish her first novel, The Old Gray Homestead, in 1919.
In Washington, Keyes became involved in numerous civic projects, including the restoration of Arlington;
in 1921, she began writing a popular series for Good Housekeeping, “Letters from a Senator’s Wife,”
which ran for fourteen years and included accounts of her extensive world travels. Having published
several volumes of fiction and nonfiction, Keyes finally wrote a bestseller, Honor Bright (1936). The next
year, she wrote the first of several biographies of religious figures, Written in Heaven: The Life on Earth of
the Little Flower of Lisieux (1937), and in 1939, she became a Roman Catholic.
Keyes in Louisiana
Keyes first visited New Orleans during Carnival in 1940, at the invitation of Clarence Bussey Hewes, a
diplomat from Jeanerette. She was enthralled by the city, and the novel Crescent Carnival (1942) resulted,
followed by a dozen romances set in Louisiana, including her most famous novel and only mystery, Dinner
at Antoine’s (1948). The River Road (1945), Steamboat Gothic (1952), and Blue Camellia (1957) were also
set in the Pelican State. One notable feature of Keyes’ fiction was the extensive research that she did to
immerse herself—and her readers—into an authentic milieu. Often including prefaces and bibliographies to
explain her sources, Keye’s attention to detail gave a rich materiality to her fiction, though it sometimes
encumbered her plots. Personally aloof and disappointed by her lack of critical success, Keyes was
dedicated to her craft and maintained a rigorous writing schedule despite chronic pain; she eventually
completed more than fifty novels, biographies, and memoirs.
In 1945, as Keyes was spending more and more time in New Orleans, she rented and later purchased an
elegant French Quarter mansion known for an earlier famous tenant, Confederate General P.T.
Beauregard. The Beauregard-Keyes House, as it is now known, remains a testimony to Keyes’ dedication
to historic preservation in architecture as well as in fiction. She died there on July 3, 1970.
Written By Barbara C. Ewell, Loyola University, New Orleans
Published » February 24, 2011 | Last Updated » January 31, 2013
Ewell, Barbara C. "Frances Parkinson Keyes ." In KnowLA Encyclopedia of Louisiana, edited by David
Johnson. Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, 2010–. Article published February 24, 2011.
http://www.knowla.org/entry/647/.
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