Following the family's move to Walthamstow, her father enjoyed increasing prosperity and influence in business, as well as his leisure pursuits: antiquarianism, sketching, and poetry. He formed lasting friendships with eminent men such as
Thomas Gray,
William Gilpin, and
Richard Gough (Gough was also at Cambridge with her uncle Benjamin and he later bequeathed £100 each to Susannah Dorothy Dixon and her brothers). In these circles, Susannah, in her early twenties, undertook her project of translating the Swedish Lutheran bishop, Uno von Troil's
Letters on Iceland from the German. Susanna's English translation,
Letters on Iceland: containing observations on the civil, literary, ecclesiastical, and natural history; antiquities, volcanos, basaltes, hot springs; customs, dress, manners of the inhabitants, &c. &c. made, during a voyage undertaken in the year 1772, by Joseph Banks, assisted by Dr. Solander, Dr. J. Lind, Dr. Uno von Troil, and several other literary and ingenious gentlemen (originally written in Swedish and published at Upsala in 1777 and translated into German by J. G. P. Moller), was published in three editions, two in 1780 in London and Dublin and a final London edition in 1810. One of the contributors to the letters, was the family friend,
Joseph Banks. It is unclear whether the translation of Troil's letters was Susanna's only contribution to publishing. Susanna's obituary in The Gentleman's Magazine, details her attention to the poor of Henham, but makes no mention of her early literary work. == References ==