William Oliver, the notorious spy of 1817. |
I'm an author specialising in family history, social history, industrial history and literary biography. Real stories; real people; real lives.
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
Spying Secrets
Sunday, 21 February 2016
Ireland and Independence: Part I
The question of Ireland’s independence was to cause much bloodshed in the closing decades of the eighteenth century and beyond.
The Irish Parliament was controlled by England until 1782, when the Rockingham administration granted Irish legislative independence
following pressure from the ‘Patriots,’ headed by Henry Grattan and the
Volunteer movement.
In theory, Grattan’s new parliament was
independent of Westminster. Ireland now had its own House of
Lords and House of Commons. Dublin Castle was its administrative centre. But
for all practical purposes, Ireland remained subject to English rule and political
influence. Ireland’s Lord Lieutenant and Lord Chancellor owed their places to
the British prime minister’s patronage.
Now the ordinary people of Ireland
endured massive economic and political disadvantages and deep religious
divisions. The Protestant ruling class or
‘ascendancy’ owned virtually all the land, and hogged every key position in the
army, navy, the law, commission of the peace, etc. Roman Catholics – the vast majority of the population
– were excluded from the Irish parliament, and the franchise.
William Pitt wished to give some relief
to disadvantaged Roman Catholics. But he was hamstrung by ultra-Tories in his
own party, and George III’s belief that granting Catholic emancipation would
violate his coronation oath.
During the 1788 Regency crisis caused by
George III’s illness, Grattan’s parliament seized the initiative and asked the
Prince of Wales to become Regent of Ireland, with unlimited powers.
This caused great tension between the
two governments. The furious Tories realized that a Regent in Ireland with
unlimited privileges could create as many peers as he liked, and tip the
balance of power in parliament. ‘Prinny’ was thought to favour their opponents,
the Whigs. A constitutional crisis was averted when the King recovered in early
1789.
But this abortive attempt by Ireland to
assert its independence strengthened the hand of those, like Pitt, who wanted a
Union of the two kingdoms. And Irish nationalists were now convinced that real
independence must be fought for – but would they choose peaceful means, or
rebellion?
Images:
The Bank of Ireland, Dublin, formerly
the old Parliament House. Gallery of Engravings, Vol. II, (Fisher, Son &
Co., c.1845).
Satirical print, 1789. The Prince of
Wales (left) rises from his chair to receive the six Commissioners from Ireland,
who are depicted as headless asses. Courtesy Library of Congress, LC-USZ62-31022.
Wednesday, 3 February 2016
Radicals and Reform
Famous Radicals. |
By the early 1790s, it was blindingly obvious to
liberal-minded thinkers that Britain's corrupt electoral system was long
overdue for reform. Unless you were a member of the governing elite, of course
- the rich had inherited the earth, and their sons were destined to rule over
the middle and lower classes.
The Radicals included some prominent Whigs like Charles James Fox and Sir Francis Burdett. They wanted the abolition of rotten boroughs, the
introduction of annual parliaments, and a more representative franchise. Reformers
harked back to the Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights and the Glorious Revolution of 1688, which they believed enshrined men’s civil liberties and rights. They looked back to a long-lost Saxon golden age in which all men had
the vote. (On the other hand, the government asserted that there was no
historical precedent for universal suffrage).
Major John Cartwright (1740–1824) was convinced that
‘many of the political evils of the day’ emanated from ‘ignorance of the
principles of the constitution’. This
former naval officer, a neat, upright gentleman, had served with distinction
until the American War of Independence, but resigned in disgust over what he
perceived as Britain's unjust treatment of the colonists.
Charles James Fox. |
Cartwright, a prolific writer and campaigner, believed
that petitioning parliament was the only way to achieve radical reform. The
Major was a founder member of the Society of Constitutional Information in
1780, along with John Horne Tooke and others. Even Pitt the Younger, then the
great white hope of the reform movement, was a member – ironic considering his later treatment of the Radicals.
Thomas Paine. |
In the 1790s, Thomas Paine’s revolutionary ideas were
taken up by the Society of Constitutional Information and by the ‘corresponding
societies’. These societies wrote to one another about parliamentary reform and
the rights of man, and spread these ideas widely in Britain. One group, the
United Englishmen, expressed the views of many freethinkers in its
‘Declaration, Resolutions and Constitution’: ‘The House of Commons...is now
thoroughly corrupted, and from being the representative of a great and free
People, is become a junto of Placemen, Pensioners and Court Dependents...The
only effectual remedy...is a radical Reform of the Representation of the People
in Parliament’ (PC/1/42/144, 1798).
Corresponding societies were formed in London, Manchester,
Leeds,
Nottingham, Norwich and Sheffield. The Sheffield Society for
Constitutional Information had nearly two thousand members. The Society
resolved that Paine should be thanked ‘for the affectionate concern he has
shown in his second work on Behalf of the Poor, the Infant and the Aged; who
notwithstanding the opulence which blesses other parts of the community, are by
the grievous weight of Taxes, rendered the miserable victims of Poverty and
wretchedness’. (Resolutions of the SSCI, 14 March 1792, Sheffield Archives, MD
251).
Matthew Campbell Browne. |
The government's spies kept close watch on the corresponding societies. Although most of the societies' members were peaceful, there were a select few with revolutionary intentions, as we shall see.
Images:
Noted Radicals: John Wilkes, John Horne Tooke,
Sir Francis Burdett (5th Baronet), William Cobbett and Henry Hunt. History of England, Henry Fisher, Son,
& Co., 1828. Author’s collection.
Charles
James Fox, Dr Johnson’s Mrs Thrale,
T.N. Foulis, 1910. Author’s collection.
‘Mad
Tom, or the Man of Rights’. Courtesy Library of Congress, LC-USZ62-3847.
Citizen
Matthew Campbell Browne, ‘Delegate from the Sheffield & Leeds
Constitutional Societies to the British Convention’ at Edinburgh in 1794.
Engraving by John Kay, 1794. Hugh Paton (ed.), A Series of Original Portraits and Caricature Etchings by the late John
Kay, Vol. 2, (Adam and Charles Black, 1877). Author’s collection.
Monday, 1 February 2016
Jane Austen and the 'Infamous Mistress' Connection
Grace Dalyrmple Elliott - Met Museum. |
Jane Austen: The Dalrymple and Elliott Connection
Jane Austen’s novel Persuasion, written in 1816
and published posthumously just months after her death in 1817, has at its
centre the Elliot family – a surname we’re all too familiar with after writing
our biography of the eighteenth-century courtesan Grace Dalrymple Elliott.
Jane Austen. |
Anne Elliot, the novel’s heroine, had been persuaded to
break off an early engagement to Captain Wentworth of the Royal Navy and, while
in Bath, was courted by her cousin and heir to the Elliot estate, the recently
widowed and caddish William Elliot.
There is also a Viscountess Dalrymple mentioned in Persuasion,
from an Irish family who is related to the Elliots. Anne’s vain father Sir
Walter and elder sister Elizabeth court Lady Dalrymple’s attention, determined
to make use of their connection to this titled lady (for the finances of the
Elliot family are in a decline – they have to rent out their family estate,
Kellynch Hall).
It’s possible, as Margaret Doody has speculated in Jane
Austen’s Names: Riddles, Persons, Places, that ‘there is a hidden joke, a
potentially dirty meaning, in wishing to see Lady Dalrymple’, because Grace’s notoriety would still be
remembered when Austen was writing – was this a sly dig at Grace, the name
chosen by Austen in the full knowledge that many of her readers would get the
joke, especially with the connection between the names Elliot and Dalrymple?
Grace was still alive at the time, although her star had
faded somewhat and she was living largely in the shadows of society – wouldn’t
you just love to know if she read the novel, and if she did, what her thoughts
were on the names of the characters!
Lady Dalrymple, PBS. |
Persuasion:Lady Dalrymple and Miss Carteret. |
If Grace is recalled somewhat in the character of Lady
Dalrymple, was her husband Sir John Eliot at all the inspiration for Sir Walter
Elliot? Both baronets, Sir John and Sir Walter, were vain and self-satisfied
men (although Sir John was certainly more careful of his fortune than Austen’s
Sir Walter), and neither man had a male heir (John Eliot’s son by Grace died as
an infant, and his only other male progeny was born illegitimately to an
unknown woman).
There is another similarity too – Sir Walter takes into his
house, ostensibly as a companion to his daughter Elizabeth, a Mrs Clay, an
impoverished widow with children to provide for and who has designs on becoming
the next Lady Elliot for all that she is beneath Sir Walter on the social ladder.
Both before and after his divorce from Grace, Sir John Eliot embarked upon a
series of affairs with women well below him socially (one was a tea dealer from
the Tottenham Road). At his death his final mistress was, like Austen’s Mrs
Clay, angling for marriage and a title – and hoping that her daughter (by
another man) would benefit from Sir John’s fortune to the detriment of his own
illegitimate offspring.
N.B. – while Sir John was an Eliot, after her divorce Grace
habitually spelled her surname differently, using both Elliot and Elliott.
Sources:
Thomas Gainsborough, Jane Austen and Fashionable Society by
Catherine Engh on NASSR Graduate Student Caucus, a fascinating read which looks
at Gainsborough's portraits of Grace in conjunction with Jane Austen's use of
the Dalrymple and Elliot surnames.
Jane Austen's Names: Riddles, Persons, Places by Margaret
Doody, University of Chicago Press, 2015.
Divorced wife, infamous mistress, prisoner in France
during the French Revolution and the reputed mother of the Prince of Wales’
child, notorious eighteenth-century courtesan Grace Dalrymple Elliott lived an
amazing life in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century London and Paris.
Strikingly tall and beautiful, later lampooned as ‘Dally
the Tall’ in newspaper gossip columns, she left her Scottish roots and convent
education behind, to re-invent herself in a ‘marriage-a-la-mode’, but before
she was even legally an adult she was cast off and forced to survive on just
her beauty and wits.
The authors of this engaging and, at times, scandalous
book intersperse the history of Grace’s tumultuous life with anecdotes of her
fascinating family, from those who knew Thomas Jefferson and George Washington,
and who helped to abolish slavery, to those who were, like Grace, mistresses of
great men.
Whilst this book is the most definitive biography of
Grace Dalrymple Elliott ever written, it is much more than that; it is Grace’s
family history which traces her ancestors from their origin in the Scottish
borders, to their move south to London. It follows them to France, America,
India, Africa and elsewhere, offering a broad insight into the social history
of the Georgian era, comprising the ups and downs, the highs and lows of life
at that time.
This is the remarkable and detailed story of Grace set,
for the first time, in the context of her wider family and told more completely
than ever before.
You can also visit Joanne and Sarah at All Things Georgian where they blog about anything and everything to do with the Georgian era.
Images supplied by Joanne and Sarah:
Grace Dalrymple Elliott by Thomas Gainsborough. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Tilly Tremayne as Lady Dalrymple in the PBS version of
Persuasion.
Jane Austen, coloured copy of a drawing by her sister
Cassandra, held by the University of Texas.
Lady Dalrymple and [her daughter] Miss Carteret escorted by
Mr Elliot and Colonel Wallis, from a 1909 copy of Persuasion.