Born in
Brampford Speke, near
Exeter in Devon, the only daughter of Commander John Evans and Eleanor Viney (later Mrs Eleanor Yate). In 1815 at Clifton, Bristol, Mary married
Wyndham Lewis, MP (1780–1838), a colleague of
Benjamin Disraeli. In August 1839, the year following Lewis's death, she married Disraeli at
St George's, Hanover Square, in London. Her fortune allowed him to purchase the estate of
Hughenden in
Buckinghamshire and to live in the style of an English gentleman. In recognition of Disraeli's services to the nation,
Queen Victoria desired to ennoble him at the end of his first ministry. However, as he wished to remain in the
House of Commons, his wife accepted the title in his place and was created
Viscountess Beaconsfield, of
Beaconsfield in the
County of Buckingham, on 30 November 1868. (After Mary's death, Disraeli accepted the title of
Earl of Beaconsfield.) Staid Victorians were often scandalised by Mary's uninhibited conversation but soon learned not to insult her within Disraeli's hearing. Even Queen Victoria herself was said to be amused when Mary Anne commented, in response to a remark about some lady's pale complexion, "I wish you could see my Dizzy in his bath!" Once, at a
house party where
Lord Hardinge, a great soldier of the day, was in the room next to the Disraelis, Mary Anne announced at breakfast that she had slept the night before between the greatest soldier (Hardinge) and the greatest orator (Disraeli) of their times: Lady Hardinge was definitely not amused. Disraeli had been unimpressed by Mary Lewis when he first met her, but he came to understand that she was shrewder than her outward manner had led him to believe. She was a great help to him in editing the books he wrote, and spent 30 years taking care of him. She once joked in public that although he had married her for her money he would do it again for love. In later life she became increasingly eccentric, both in conversation and appearance, but her husband's devotion and loyalty to her never faltered. She was some twelve years older than her husband but their romance continued until the day she died. In the spring of 1872, Mary became seriously ill, and by May it was clear that she was dying of
stomach cancer. She rallied sufficiently to take a summer tour through the
Home Counties with her husband. In November she felt well enough to hold a small dinner party for their close friends; but her condition deteriorated and she died on 15 December, at the age of eighty. "There was no care which she could not mitigate, and no difficulty which she could not face. She was the most cheerful and courageous woman I ever knew" her husband wrote after her death. His great adversary
William Gladstone, who had liked Mary, wrote him a letter of condolence. Disraeli, touched by this sympathy from a man who disliked him, replied that "Marriage is the greatest earthly happiness when founded on mutual sympathy." She is buried with Disraeli in a vault in the
Church of St Michael and All Angels Church, Hughenden, in
Hughenden, Buckinghamshire, close to the Disraeli family home,
Hughenden Manor. The house is now in the care of the
National Trust, and has been preserved in the state when it was occupied by the Disraelis. It is open to the public as a visitor attraction. ==Cultural depictions==