Ann Holmes, said to have "a very superior intellect" and much wealth as a child, wrote at the age of 15 a number of excited love letters and verses to Hugh Doherty, an Irish ex-
dragoon, who was twice her age when they married. However, she left him and their baby in 1806, after which Hugh Doherty published a book entitled
The Discovery, which included her letters and related that they had eloped after Ann's parents had confined her in a private madhouse. In 1811, Hugh Doherty brought a successful action against the architect
Philip William Wyatt (died 1835) for "criminal conversation" with his wife, but received only £1000 in damages, not the £20,000 he had claimed. Her relationship with Wyatt was over by 1818, when she was calling herself Ann Attersoll, presumably referring to cohabitation with the wealthy merchant and banker John Attersoll (c. 1784–1822), who had briefly been a
Whig MP for Wootton Bassett in 1812–1813. By 1820, Ann Doherty was living under the name St Anne Holmes in France, where she remained. ==Writings==