ebook img

Dear Fanny: Women’s letters to and from New South Wales, 1788-1857 / Chosen and introduced by Helen Heney. PDF

213 Pages·1985·25.158 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Dear Fanny: Women’s letters to and from New South Wales, 1788-1857 / Chosen and introduced by Helen Heney.

Dear Fanny This book was published by ANU Press between 1965–1991. This republication is part of the digitisation project being carried out by Scholarly Information Services/Library and ANU Press. This project aims to make past scholarly works published by The Australian National University available to a global audience under its open-access policy. To the memory of my Mother, Grandfather, Father and Brother, who gave me a sense of continuity of the past (1837-1982) Other books The Chinese Camellia (1950) The Proud Lady (1951) Dark Moon (1953) This Quiet Dust (1956) In a Dark Glass: the Story of Paul Edmund Strzelecki (1961) The Leaping Blaze (1962) Australia’s Founding Mothers (1978) Dear Fanny Women’s letters to and jrom New South Wales, 1788-1857 Chosen and introduced by Helen Heney H Australian National University Press A Division of Pergamon Press Australia ^ LIBRARY ^ Australian National University Press is a division of Pergamon Press Australia and a member of the Pergamon Coup of Companies. AUSTRALIA Pergamon Press (Australia) Pty Ltd, 19a Boundary Street, Rushcutters Bay, N.S.W. 2011, Australia UK. Pergamon Press Ltd, Headington Hill Hall, Oxford 0X3 OBW, England U.S.A. Pergamon Press Inc., Maxwell House, Fairview Park, Elmsford, N.Y. 10523, U.S.A. CANADA Pergamon Press Canada Ltd, Suite 104, 150 Consumer’s Road, Willowdale, Ontario M2) 1P9, Canada FEDERAL REPUBLIC Pergamon Press GmbH, 6242 Kronberg-Tanus, OF GERMANY Hammerweg 6, Postfach 1305, Federal Republic of Germany First published in Australia 1985 by the Australian National University Press. Copyright © 1985 Helen Heney Cover design by Barry Jones Typeset in Australia by The Typographers Printed in Australia by Macarthur Press. National Library of Australia Cataloguing in Publication Data Dear Fanny Includes index. ISBN 0 08 029876 1 h 1. Women — Australia — History — Sources. 1. Heney, Helen, 1907 — 305.4'2'0994 Library of Congress No. 84-71360 All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of Pergamon Press (Australia) Pty Ltd. Contents Preface ix Acknowledgments xi Foreword xiii 1 A First Fleet Convict Tells the Press 1 2 A Voice from the ‘Floating Brothel’ 2 3 Elizabeth Macarthur, the ‘Happy Pioneer’ 4 4 Mary Talbot to her Patron in England 6 5 The Romantic Bride 8 6 A Request for Money from Parramatta 9 7 Elizabeth Macarthur Puts Down Roots 9 8 Samuel Marsden’s Homesick Bride 10 9 The Rev. Richard Cobbold Introduces Margaret Catchpole 14 10 Sarah Bird Begins her New Life 16 11 The Anxious Mrs Paterson 17 12 Enter the Real Margaret Catchpole 20 13 An Elderly Pioneer has Qualms before Sailing 22 14 Margaret Catchpole from her ‘Place of Banishment’ 23 15 Like a Great Tiger ... 25 16 Eliza Kent Joins the Rush for Exotic Birds 26 17 Mrs Macarthur Tells Piper of the Irish Rising 27 18 Another Side to D’Arcy Wentworth 29 19 Eliza Kent to Piper on Norfolk Island 30 20 Compassion Makes Strange Bedfellows 31 21 Mrsjennett Evans to Governor King 31 22 An Ex-convict Describes the Colony 33 23 Mrs Macarthur Expresses Forebodings 34 24 Bligh’s Daughter Adds her Version 35 25 Mrs Macarthur to Piper on Norfolk Island 37 26 Mrs Wills to Mrs Harding 37 27 Margaret Catchpole Chronicles Yet Another Flood 39 28 Macquarie and the Augean Stables 39 29 Mary Ann Shears to the Father of her Sons 46 30 The Ageing Margaret Catchpole to her Uncle, William Howes 47 31 The Rev. Richard Cobbold Gives Free Range to his Imagination 49 v 32 The Great Success Story: Mary Reibey’s Business Style 50 33 Ann Chapman Seeks an Assigned Servant 51 34 Mrs Macarthur, Alone Again, to Piper 51 35 Mrs Macquarie Underestimates the Opposition 53 36 Background to the Hassalls: Elizabeth Hassall to a Spiritual Sister 53 37 Mrs Macarthur on Life at Elizabeth Farm and Aboriginal Attacks, and Elizabeth jnr 56 Describes her own Preoccupations with the Native People 57 38 Eliza Bent to Macquarie and the Honours of War Paid in Cash 58 39 . . . an Honest Livelihood 60 40 The Parson’s Postbag 60 41 An Assigned Convict to her Employer, or a Scandal Made Public 65 42 The Slightly Improbable Sarah Thornton 66 43 Cloven, Not Crested: Eliza Walsh Stands for Sex Equality in 1821 67 44 The Embarrassments of an Employer 69 45 Elizabeth Macarthur to Miss Kingdon 69 46 Elizabeth Mitchell Presents a Conundrum to the Colonial Secretary 71 47 Poor Sally Henry (Mrs William Bland) 72 48 The Patient Griseldas 75 49 Janet Ranken to her Sister-in-law 77 50 New Light on a First Fleet Prisoner 77 51 Sarah Lawson to her Son 79 52 Christiana Blomfield and her Mother, Christiana Brooks, of Denham Court 79 53 Ann (Mrs Anthony) Hordern to her Mother 85 54 Eliza Bent to Piper, or Resentment Recollected 86 55 The Children Left Behind: Lucretia Hely and Priscilla Wemyss 88 56 One of Miss Makdougall’s Many Polite Notes 89 57 The Extraordinary Case of Mrs Edwards-Lockaye- Low Key 90 58 Napoleon’s ‘Betsey’ in Sydney Society 91 59 Eliza Darling and the Dumaresqs 92 60 The Noun of Assembly is Macleay 99 61 Harriet King to her Husband, and Mary Lethbridge to her Mother, Mrs King snr 102 62 Mrs Macarthur’s Darkening Scene 106 63 Mrs Macquarie Keeps in Touch 108 64 Miss Penelope Lucas to John Macarthur jnr in London 1 10 vi 65 Elizabeth Cox and Mrs Mackenzie, to Mrs Piper on a Wedding at Clarendon 111 66 Mrs Edye Manning Chats to her Mother-in-law 114 67 Lady Parry to her Mother, Lady Stanley 117 68 Mrs Fay Dies of a Broken Heart: Mrs Arlett to her Son-in-law, Charles Lay 119 69 Sarah Wentworth Tells of her Father’s Death 120 70 Elizabeth Fry to Marsden on the Female Convicts 122 71 ‘Judge not . . Mrs Colina McLeod to her Husband’s Boss 123 72 Elizabeth Tells Edward the End of the Story 124 73 Mrs Sarah Suttor to her Husband George 124 74 Blaxlands, Ritchies and Dowlings, a Lively Lot, with an Echo from Lady Brisbane 125 75 Ann Gore to Friends in England 129 76 Eliza Darling has Definite Ideas about the Colony and its Affairs 132 77 News of the Ryries, 1838 133 78 Anne Deas Thomson to Sir Richard Bourke 135 79 Mrs A.J. King to her English Cousins 137 80 Maria Radford Answers ‘Like the Frank Good Lady as You Are’ 140 81 Mrs Dunlop: the Aborigines and the Press 141 82 The Vineyard Daughters Go North 142 83 The N.S.W. Carpet-baggers 147 84 Susan Spencer (nee Dowling) to her Brother, James Sheen 152 85 Mary Ogilvie to her Daughter, Ellen Bundock 153 86 Elizabeth White Robertson Leaves an Incomplete Record 155 87 The Widow D’s Story 157 88 In Defence of Mrs Reibey’s Social Status 158 89 Lady Gipps Tries to Set the Record Straight 160 90 Mrs Ann Baker to Eliza Camfield in England and Maria Windeyer to her Son Willie in Sydney 161 91 A Garden Enclosed: Dame Magdalen Le Clerc and Dame M. Scholastica Gregory to their Mother Superior in England 165 92 The Death of Mrs Broughton Shows Eleanor Stephen (nee Bedford) as Matron 168 93 News from an Overlander 169 94 A Refugee from the Germany of 1848 Describes Australia to her Relatives at Home 170 95 The Non-Flickering Lamp: Elizabeth Macarthur to Edward 171 96 Mrs Henry (later Lady) Parker, to her Brother Edward 174 vii 97 Anne Hassall to her Son James >75 98 Lady Forbes Teils James Macarthur of her Regrets over her ‘Overdelicacy’ 178 99 Mrs Lang Presents Compliments to Mr Parkes 180 100 Three Women Write from the South 181 101 Epilogue: Two Australians Look at the Old World 185 Index 189 Illustrations Da-ring-ha, Colebee’s wife, by Thomas Wading 5 Elizabeth (Mrs Samuel) Marsden {nee Fristan) in her wedding dress 11 Elizabeth Marsden in old age 11 Notice of Escape of Margaret Catchpole 15 Elizabeth (Mrs William) Paterson 18 Margaret Catchpole 20 Holograph letter from Ipswich gaol by Margaret Catchpole 21 Esther Abrahams (Mrs George Johnston), First Fleet convict 43 Mary Ann (Mrs John) Piper 47 Elizabeth (Mrs Rowland) Hassall 54 Dr Bland’s house 73 Christiana (Mrs Richard) Brooks, by Augustus Earle 81 Eliza (Lady) Darling with her children, by John Linnell 93 Elizabeth (Mrs Alexander) Macleay, after John Hopner 101 The King Family 103 Harriet Mary (Lady) Dowling 126 Anna Josepha (Mrs Philip Gidley) King 138 Anna Maria (Mrs Hannibal) Macarthur 143 Catherine (Mrs Patrick) Leslie 145 Emmie (Mrs George) Leslie 145 Annie (Mrs G.C.) Wickham 145 The Lowe home at Coogee 149 Government House, Parramatta, 1843 150 Mrs Mary Ogilvie 153 Maria (Mrs Richard) Windeyer 162 Elizabeth (Mrs John) Macarthur 172 Anne (Mrs Thomas) Hassall 176 The Prisoner of Gisore, sketch by Adelaide Ironside 187 viii Preface When I finished my first hook on Australian women, Australia 's Founding Mothers, 1 found that I missed their company—those tough, cunning, courageous and vulnerable pioneers whose basic purpose was survival. And, like the amateur watchmender who found himself with one clock and enough pieces for another, 1 had among my references some which proved a gold mine, out of which I have tried to quarry an Australian ‘first’ —a collection of letters chosen from so rich a lode that I was forced to limit myself arbitrarily to letters basically to and from women in New South Wales and to a period as long as Victoria’s reign. In so doing 1 made a discovery which made me extend it by two slightly later letters, which rounded off the sequence. Letters are a special branch of literature, and Australia still has much to add to Rachel Henning’s unconscious masterpiece. So far as 1 know, there is not yet a comprehensive anthology, so I did not have far to search for material to include; indeed the real problem was the quantity that had to be omitted. But this, I hope, will point the way for others to delve into the big family records such as the Hassall Papers or the Darling-Dumaresq Papers, not to mention the long years of Elizabeth Macarthur’s corres­ pondence with friends and relations and absent sons. Letters are the most vivid form of writing, the expression of a need too urgent to be suppressed. My writers, no matter by what passion they were moved—love, hatred, spite, interest, excitement, wonder, revenge, or simply an axe to grind—had to get their feelings on paper. No wonder the result makes fascinating reading, from the first woman prisoner’s com­ plaint to the rapture of Adelaide Ironside discovering the artistic stimulus of the old world and Elise Breton, onlooker at a private ball of Queen Victoria, who found her most welcome compliment that of being recog­ nised as an Australian. In that short span of time—1788-1856—something new had come into being; and here are the steps. These were the women who put down roots and found a sense of identity—that comfort women now seem in danger of losing. Of the work itself, I am grateful to Patricia Croft for her skill in shortening and compressing the introductions and references and explan­ ations that are intended to sketch the background of each letter and its writer, so that the original writers make a stronger impact. To add still more to this, I have left the letters untouched, with misspellings, word omissions, and gaps where too frequent readings has turned a fold into a tear, or too eager breaking of the seal has damaged the text; and above all, 1 have let stand the punctuation and capitalisation in use at the time.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.