1819

1820

1821

Feb 1820


Monday Tuesday 1st
Mitford first wrote and crossed out "Monday" on this entry.

At home--Heard from Miss Webb--went with dear Drum into Reading to buy a new bombazine gown--bought a very nice one for 2s. 9d. a yard--called on the Brookes--Newberys--Joliffes--the Institution & Mrs. Havell's--came home to dinner--a very pleasant morning.

Wednesday 2nd

At home--went Firtopping--got a great many--fed my Bobbies--read Spence's Anecdotes--very good indeed--& wrote another Postscript to Sir William Elford--read likewise the Eclectic & British Reviews.

Thursday 3rd

At home--went firtopping--got a great many--fed my Bobbies in the Plantations--read The Man in the Moon famous & the Memoirs of the Margravine of Bareith

Friday 4th

At home--went firtopping--got a great many indeed--fed my bobbies in the Plantations--wrote to Miss Webb--poor Molly grows big.
From pregnancy.

Saturday 5th

At home--new trimmed my old bombazine--heard from Eliza Webb--read Anastasius.

Sunday 6th

At home--wrote to Mr. Palmer enclosing my letter to Sir William--rode with Drum to Farley Hill--saw Mrs. Dickinson--Mrs. AllinghamMr. Rigby & the Miss Parfitts--came home to dinner--a pleasant morning--read Anastasius--very good.

Monday 7th

At home--wrote to Mrs. Hofland--Lucy finished my new black bombazine gown--Drum went coursing, killed 4 hares & a rabbit--readAnastasius--very fine indeed.

Tuesday 8th

Sent a hare to Mrs. Hofland--gave one to Mrs. Havell--went firtopping--got a great many--read Anastasius.

Wednesday 9th

Went firtopping & wooding with Granny & Lucy in the plantation by poor Mossy's grave--got a great quantity of wood & firtops--read Windham's speeches.

Thursday 10th

Went to Reading with Drum--called on the Brookes, Newberys, Tuppens & Valpys--dined at the Jolliffes--Mrs. Maddison, Harry Marsh & Mr. Sherwood came in the evening--excellent dinner--very pleasant day--corrected some proofs of Mrs. Jolliffe's little Tales--came home at night.

Friday 11th

Read a tolerable Poem called Hacho or the spell of St. Wilten--went firtopping--wrote to Miss Webb--Poor dear Mossy's grave planted with flowers by Drum & George--God bless him poor dear!

Saturday 12th

Went firtopping--snowdrops out.

Monday 14th

Went wooding & firtopping in the lower plantation--got a great deal--Moses killed 3 hares & two rabbits dear love! Moll a great pet.

Tuesday 15th

Wrote to Miss James--sent her a hare--went wooding with Drum & the pets--read Delphine--much too dismal--planted some sweet Williams on dear Mossy's grave.

Wednesday 16th


Thursday the 17th 1820

Wrote to Eliza Webb--went into Reading with Drum--called at the Jolliffes--Newberys--Sherwoods--Whites--Valpys (witnessed the dear Drs. Will)--saw Mr. Dundas who sent off my letter to Sir William, & a great many people. Came home to dinner & read Mme. Necker de Saussure's Notice sur la caractere et les ecrits de Madame de Staël--which is good enough.

Friday 18th

At home--went wooding with dear Granny in the lower Plantation--got a great deal--read the Eskdale Herdboy (good) & wrote to Mrs. Hofland.

Saturday 19th

At home--went wooding with dear Granny in the lower Plantation--wrote to Miss James & Mrs. Dickinson--read Windham's Speeches--very good.

Sunday 20th

At home--Dear Drum went to Town in the snow--heard from Mrs. Dickinson--wrote to Mrs. Dickinson--read Dudley--very good.

Monday 21st

At home--Dear Drum in London--went firtopping--fed my Bobbies--read Dudley.

Tuesday 22nd

At home--heard from dear Drum & Miss James--fed my Bobbies--wrote to dear Drum & Miss Rogers for Miss James--read Dudley.

Wednesday 23rd

At home--heard from dear Drum--went firtopping with Molly in the plantations--fed my Bobbies--read Nourjahad old but pretty.

Thursday 24th

At home--heard from dear Drum & Miss Rogers--wrote to Mrs. Dickinson (to tell her of the birth of Mrs. Woodburn's boy) & to Miss James--read Riley's narrative of the Loss of the Brig Commerce--interesting but Munchausenish.

Friday 25th

At home--heard from dear Drum--went firtopping with Molly--read Coelebs Deceived poor methodistical stuff--Dear Drum came home in the Evening.

Saturday 26th

At home--went wooding & firtopping--heard from Eliza Webb.

Sunday 27th

At home--went primrosing in the park & fields with dear Drum--got a good many--read Glenfergus--famous.

Monday 28th

At home--Dear Drum went into Reading for the Grand Jury--went wooding in the lower plantation with dear Granny--fed my Bobbies--read Authentic Account of the French Revolution--interesting.

Tuesday 29th

At home--heard from Drum--dear Granny went into Reading--wrote to Drum & to Dr. Harness--fed my Bobbies--Mrs. Valpy & the Miss Valpys called--went firtopping in the plantation--got a great many--fed my bobbies there--read No Fiction--sad methodistical stuff--Heard from Drum again--who went to London from the Grand Jury.

Gloss of Names Mentioned


Nature

fir

  • species: Abies alba
  • genus: Abies
  • family: Pinaceae
Evergreen coniferous trees found through much of North and Central America, Europe, Asia, and North Africa. Unlike other conifers, firs bear erect cones that are raised above the branches like candles; at maturity, the cones disintegrate to release winged seeds. One of Mitford’s favorite foraging trees; she calls her collecting activity fir topping. Mitford would likely have been familiar with the European silver fir, which was brought to England in the 17th century. Other types of firs such as Douglas firs and noble firs, native to North America and used as Christmas trees, were introduced to the UK in the nineteenth century.

robin redbreast

  • species: Erithacus rubecula
  • genus: Erithacus
  • family: Muscicapidae
Small songbird, native to Europe, now considered a type of Old World flycatcher. In Mitford's time, believed to be part of the thrush family, along with nightingales. Not to be confused with the American robin, a new World thrush, this bird is sometimes referred to as an English robin in North America. Frequently referenced in British folk tales and popular culture, the bird became associated with the Christmas holiday in the mid-nineteenth century. The bird's name derives from the male forename Robin or Robert, which led to nicknames of Bob and Bobby. Robins in Great Britain are generally less wary of humans than their counterparts in continental Europe. Mitford calls the tame robins she feeds her bobbies.

brown hare

  • species: Lepus europaeus
  • genus: Lepus
  • family: Leporidae
Hares and jackrabbits are wild members of the rabbit family. Brown hares are small, furry mammals with golden brown fur with white underbellies and tails and black-tipped ears. They have longer ears and more powerful legs than European rabbits and live alone or in pairs, rather than in groups. Thought to be introduced into Britain from Eurasia with the Romans or earlier.

rabbit

  • species: Oryctolagus cuniculus
  • genus: Oryctolagus
  • family: Leporidae
Small, grey-brown furry mammal that lives in groups in networks of underground burrows. Same species as domesticated rabbits, and raised for meat, fur, and as companion animals. Traditionally the fur has been felted for hats as well as used to line garments. The meat was an important staple in the diet of the poorer classes, purchased, hunted or trapped, sometimes in violation of game and enclosure laws enacted from the 18th century forward. Prefer grasslands with nearby treelines or hedges. Native to the Iberian peninsula and southern France, but has been widely introduced elsewhere. UK rabbits are believed to have come with the Normans and populations increased during the eighteenth-century with changing agricultural methods such as predator control and field crop farming.

    flower

      Flowering plants, whether domesticated or wild.

      common snowdrop

      • species: Galanthus nivalis
      • genus: Galanthus
      • family: Amaryllidaceae
      Small white-flowered plant propagated by bulbs, native to Europe and the Middle East and widely naturalized elsewhere. Believed to be native to the UK since the 16th century. Flowers in late winter and early spring, around the vernal equinox and so is considered a harbinger of spring. May also symbolize purity, hope, or the Christian Holy Trinity. A frequent subject of 19th century poetry including works by Landon and Wordsworth.

      Sweet William

      • species: Dianthus barbatus
      • genus: Dianthus
      • family: Caryophyllaceae
      Member of the pink family whose clusters of flowers grow in an upward-facing umbrel, native to the mountains of southern Europe and introduced into northern Europe and the UK in the 16th century. Wild varieties carry flowers that are variegated red with white; cultivated varieties come in shades of solid and variegated white, pink, and red.

      primrose

      • genus: Primula
      • species: Primula vulgaris
      • family: Primulaceae
      One of Mitford’s favorite flowers, can bloom with creamy yellow flowers from late December through May in Berkshire. Native to western and southern Europe. It is not to be confused with evening primrose (Oenothera), a genus of 100+ species of herbaceous flowering plants native to the Americas. Mitford also mentions the evening primroses, which have been cultivated in Eurasia since the early seventeenth century and are now naturalized in some areas.

      Places


      Publications

      Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men. Collected from the Conversation of Mr. Pope, and Other Eminent Persons of His Time

      • Author:
      • Date: 1820
        Spence’s Anecdotes were collected and published posthumously in 1820 by Edmund Malone.

      The Eclectic Review

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.
        Monthly periodical published between 1805 and 1868. Focusesd on long and short reviews and topical review essays. Founded by Dissenters and operated as a non-profit; all profits were donated to the British and Foreign Bible Society. Followed a nonsectarian editorial policy with an intellectual tone modeled on 18th-century periodicals but advanced reviewing toward critical analysis and away from quotation and summary. Coverage included American as well as British literature, and other subjects and titles of general interest. Influential editors included co-founder Daniel Parken (until 1813), Josiah Conder (1813-1836), Thomas Price (1837-1855).

      British Critic, A New Review

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.
        Conservative periodical with High Church editorial views. Published monthly between 1792 and 1825 and then quarterly until 1843. Succeeded by the English Review in 1853. Edited until 1811 by Thomas Fanshaw Middleton. Also edited by William R. Lyall (1816-17); Archibald M. Campbell (about 1823-1833); James S. Boone (1833-1837); Samuel R. Maitland (1837-38); John Henry Newman (1838-1841); and Thomas Mozley (1841-43).

      The Man in the Moon

      • Author:
      • Date:
        Full title: The Man in the Moon, A Speech from the Throne to the Senate of Lunataria. In the Moon.. Political satire.

      Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina

      • Author:
      • Date:
        Full title: Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina: princess royal of Prussia, margravine of Bareith, sister of Frederick the Great. Manuscripts show that her memoirs were written or revised in French between 1748 and 1758, and then printed in German and in French in 1810.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham

      • Author:
      • Date:
        3 volumes. Full title: Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham, to which is prefixed some account of his life by Thomas Amyot. Mitford rated them good and very good.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      Hacho; or, the Spell of St. Wilten

      • Author:
      • Date: Friday 11th February 1820
        Narrative poem in imitation of Scott, written while the author was at Cambridge. Mitford rated it tolerable in journal entry Friday 11th February 1820 .

      Delphine

      • Author:
      • Date:
        Mitford rated it not good and much too dismal.

      Tales of Fancy: The Shipwreck

      • Author:
      • Date: 1816
        The Shipwreck makes up volume one of the three-volume work. The remaining volumes make up Country Neighbours. As she reads, Mitford rated the volumes famous; very good and very good indeed.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      The Eskdale Herd-Boy

      • Author:
      • Date:
        Full title: The Eskdale Herd-Boy, a Scottish Tale for the Instruction and Amusement of Young People. Mitford rated it good.

      Dudley

      • Author:
      • Date:
        3 volumes. by Miss O'Keeffe.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.

      Glenfergus. In Three Volumes

      • Author:
      • Date:

      Authentic Account of the French Revolution

      • Author: No author listed.
      • Date: No date listed.
        Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it interesting. Source: Journal.

      No Fiction

      • Author:
      • Date:
        Full title: No Fiction: a narrative founded on recent and interesting facts. Mitford rated it sad methodistical stuff.

      Persons, Personas, and Characters

      Mary Webb

      • Webb Mary Elizabeth
      • Wokingham, Berkshire, England
      Close friend and frequent correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Mary Webb was the daughter of James Webb. and Jane Elizabeth Ogbourn. Baptized on April 15, 1796 in Wokingham, Berkshire. Sister of Elizabeth (called Eliza) and Jane Eleanor Webb and niece of the elder Mary Webb, Aunt Mary. In Needham’s papers, he notes from the Berkshire Directorythat she lived on Broad street, presumably in Wokingham, Berkshire. She was the wife of Thomas Hawkins as she is referred to thus in probate papers of 1858 regarding the wills of her sister Eliza Webb Walter and her husband Henry Walter. Date of death unknown. Dates unknown.

      George Mitford

      • George Mitford Esq.
      • George Midford
      • Hexham, Northumberland, England
      • Three Mile Cross, Shinfield, Berkshire, England
      Father of Mary Rusell Mitford, George Mitford was the son of Francis Midford, surgeon, and Jane Graham. The family name is sometimes recorded as Midford. Immediate family called him by nicknames including Drum, Tod, and Dodo. He was a member of a minor branch of the Mitfords of Mitford Castle in Northumberland. Although later sources would suggest that he was a graduate of the University of Edinburgh medical school, there is no evidence that he obtained a medical degree and he did not generally refer to himself as Dr. Mitford, preferring to style himself Esq.. In 1784, he is listed in a Hampshire directory as surgeon (medicine) of Alresford. His father and grandfather worked as apothecary-surgeons and it seems likely that he served a medical apprenticeship with family members.
      He married Mary Russell on October 17, 1785 at New Alresford, Hampshire. On the marriage allegation papers, both gave their addresses as Old Alresford; they later came to live at Broad Street in New Alresford. Their only child to live to adulthood, Mary Russell Mitford, was born two years later on December 16, 1787 at New Alresford, Hampshire. He assisted Mitford's literary career by representing her interests in London and elsewhere with theater owners and publishers. He was active in Whig politics and later served as a local magistrate. He coursed greyhounds with his friend James Webb.

      Mrs. Havell

      • Havell Mrs.
      Forename unknown. Dates unknown.

      Sir William Elford

      • Elford William Sir baronet Recorder for Plymouth Recorder for Totnes Member of Parliament
      • Kingsbridge, Devon, England
      • Totnes, Devon, England
      According to L’Estrange, Sir William was first a friend of Mitford’s father, and Mitford met him for the first time in the spring of 1810 when he was a widower nearing the age of 64. They carried on a lively correspondence until his death in 1837.
      Elford worked as a banker at Plymouth Bank (Elford, Tingcombe and Purchase) in Plymouth, Devon, from its founding in 1782. He was elected a member of Parliament for Plymouth as a supporter of the government and Tory William Pitt, and served from 1796 to 1806. After his election defeat in Plymouth in 1806, he was elected member of Parliament for Rye and served from July 1807 until his resignation in July 1808. For his service in Parliament as a supporter of Pitt, he was made a baronet in 1800. After his son Jonathan came of age, he tried to secure a stable government post for him but never succeeded. Mayor of Plymouth in 1796 and Recorder for Plymouth from 1797 to 1833, he was also Recorder for Totnes from 1832 to 1834. Sir William served as an officer in the South Devon militia from 1788, eventually attaining the rank of Lieutenant Colonel; the unit saw active service in Ireland during the Peninsular Wars. Sir William was a talented amateur painter in oils and watercolors who exhibited at the Royal Society from 1774 to 1837; he exhibited still lifes and portraits but preferred landscapes. He was elected to the Royal Society Academy in 1790. He was also a talented amateur naturalist and was elected to the Royal Linnaean Society in 1790; late in life, he published his findings on an alternative to yeast.
      He married his first wife, Mary Davies of Plympton, on January 20, 1776 and they had one son, Jonathan, and two daughters, Grace Chard and Elizabeth. After the death of his first wife, he married Elizabeth Hall Walrond, widow of Lieutenant-Colonel Maine Swete Walrond of the Coldstream Guards. His only son Jonathan died in 1823, leaving him without an heir.

      Frederika Sophie Wilhelmine of Prussia

      • Frederika Sophie Wilhelmine
      • Margravine of Brandenburg-Bareuth
      • Berlin, Germany
      • Bayreuth, Bavaria, Germany
      House of Hohenzollern, granddaughter of George I of Great Britain, daughter of Frederic William I of Prussia and older sister of Frederick the Great. Patron of music; composer for voice, strings, keyboard and woodwinds; player on the lute.

      Molly

        Mitford's dog, whom she describes in a letter of 1820-11-27 as a pretty little Spaniel with long curling hair--so white & delicate & ladylike.

        Eliza Webb

        • Webb Elizabeth Eliza
        • Wokingham, Berkshire, England
        • Sandgate, Kent, England
        Elizabeth Webb, called Eliza, was a neighbor and friend of Mary Russell Mitford. Eliza Webb was the youngest daughter of James Webb and Jane Elizabeth Ogbourn. She was baptized privately on March 3, 1797, and publicly on June 8, 1797 in Wokingham, Berkshire. She is the sister of Mary Elizabeth and Jane Eleanor Webb. In 1837 she married Henry Walters, Esq., in Wokingham, Berkshire. In Needham’s papers, he notes from the Berkshire Directorythat she lived on Broad street, presumably in Wokingham. Source: See Needham’s letter to Roberts on November 27, 1953 .

        Charles Fyshe Palmer

        • Palmer Charles Fyshe
        • Long Fyshe
        • Luckley House, Wokingham, Berkshire, England
        • Wokingham, Berkshire, England
        Charles Fyshe Palmer was the son of Charles Fyshe Palmer and Lucy Jones. He married Lady Madelina Gordon Sinclair in 1805 at Kimbolton Castle in Kimbolton, Herefordshire . They lived at Luckley House, Wokingham, Berkshire and at East Court, Finchampstead, Berkshire. Through her siblings, Lady Madelina was connected to several of the most influential aristocratic families in the country, and Charles Fyshe Palmer’s marriage to Lady Madelina thus gained him access to aristocratic houses, including the Holland House.
        A Whig politician, Palmer began running for Parliament elections as the member for Reading after 1816, and appears to have served off and on in that role until 1841. He led the Berkshire meetings to protest British government’s handling of the Peterloo Massacre in 1819. On March 16, 1820, Palmer ran for a seat in Parliament against two other candidates. The votes ran: John Berkeley Monck (418 votes), Charles Fyshe Palmer(399 votes), and John Weyland(395 votes.) Mitford’s letters around this time indicate she much preferred his opponent J. B. Monck, and she had earlier satirized Palmer in 1818 as vastly like a mop-stick, or, rather, a tall hop-pole, or an extremely long fishing-rod, or anything that is all length and no substance.
        Mitford also mentions Palmer in connection with a legal issue surrounding the Billiard Club, in her letter to Talfourd of 31 August 1822 . Mitford also mentions the ways that Palmer’s political opponents sometimes undermined his Whig reformist positions by referencing the noble privileges (and money) he accrued by marrying the Lady Madelina Gordon in 1805.

        Mrs. Dickinson

        • Catherine Allingham Dickinson
        • Middlesex, England
        • St. Marylebone, Middlesex, England
        Catherine Allingham was the daughter of Thomas Allingham. She married Charles Dickinson on August 2, 1807 at St. Giles, South Mimms, Middlesex. They lived in Swallowfield, where their daughter Frances was born, and where they were visited by the Mitford family. According to Mitford, Catherine Dickinson was fond of match-making among her friends and acquaintances. (See Mitford's February 8th, 1821 letter to Elford . Her husband Charles died in 1827, when her daughter was seven. Source: L'Estrange).

        Mrs. Allingham

        • Allingham Mrs.
        Likely the mother of Catherine Dickinson. Mitford visited them at Farley Hill in 1820, when their daughter Frances was born. Source: Journal.

          Barbara Wreaks Hofland

          • Hofland Wreaks Barbara
          • Yorkshire, England
          • Richmond-on-Thames
          Novelist and writer of children’s books popular in England and America, Barbara Hofland was a native of Sheffield, Yorkshire, where she published poems from July 1794 in the local newspaper, The Sheffield Iris. Her first marriage to Thomas Bradshawe Hoole left her widowed and in poverty, raising a son, Frederic, on her own, and she supported herself by publishing poems and children’s books, and by running a girl’s school in Harrogate. second marriage was to the artist Thomas Christopher Hofland. (Source: ODNB)

          Lucy Sweetser Hill

          • Hill Sweatser Lucy
          • Stratfield Saye, Berkshire, England
          Beloved servant for twelve years in the Mitford household who, on 7 August 1820 married Charles Hill. She is the basis for the title character in the Our Village story. Source: Needham Papers, Reading Central Library.

          Mitford Russell Mary

          • Mrs. Mitford
          • Ashe, Hampshire, England
          • Three Mile Cross, parish of Shinfield, Berkshire, England
          Mary Russell was the youngest child of the Rev. Dr. Richard Russell and his second wife, Mary Dicker; she was born about 1750 in Ashe, Hampshire. (Her birth date is as yet unverified; period sources indicate that she was ten years older than her husband George, born in 1760.) Through the Russells, she was a distant relation of the Dukes of Bedford (sixth creation, 1694). She had two siblings, Charles William and Frances; both predeceased her and their parents, which resulted in Mary Russell inheriting her family’s entire estate upon her mother’s death in 1785. Her father’s rectory in Ashe was only a short distance from Steventon, and so she was acquainted with the young Jane Austen. She married George Mitford or Midford on October 17, 1785 at New Alresford, Hampshire. On the marriage allegation papers, both gave their addresses as Old Alresford. Their only daughter, Mary Russell Mitford, was born two years later on December 16, 1787 at New Alresford, Hampshire. Mary Russell died on January 2, 1830 at Three Mile Cross in the parish of Shinfield, Berkshire. Her obituary in the 1830 New Monthly Magazine gives New Year’s day as the date of her death.

          Mossy

            Mitford’s dog; He died on Saturday, August 21, 1819 at Bertram House. Mossy was a nickname for Moss Trooper.

            William Windham

            • Windham William
            • Soho, London, England
            • London, England
            Politican and friend of Edmund Burke. Early in his political career he was a friend of Charles James Fox and the Rockingham Whigs who supported the American Revolution. He later became an Anti-Jacobin Pittite, served as Secretary of War, and supported the Restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in France. He was a noted orator, and Mitford read a collection of his speeches.

            William Tuppen

            • William Tuppen Captain
            • Captain Tuppen
            In Mitford's time, a captain retired from the Royal West regiment of the London militia. Later became a magistrate and served as mayor of Reading.

            Mrs. Tuppen

            • Tuppen Mrs.
            Spouse of William Tuppen. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.

            Mrs. Madison

            • Madison Mrs.
            Mitford dined with her at the Jolliffe's in 1820. May also be spelled Maddison. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.

            Henry (Harry) Marsh

            • Marsh Henry
            MRM's letters in December 1820 indicate that Henry Marsh was involved in a local political tiff with Henry Hart Milman. The rift between Henry Marsh and H.H. Milman is well documented. See The History of Parliament online.

            Mr. Sherwood

            • Sherwood Thomas
            Practiced medicine in Reading. He was a friend of John Berkeley Monck, and likely others in the Reading political scene. Sources: Needham Papers, Reading Central Library ; History of Parliament Online. ReadingBorough http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/constituencies/reading.

              Allaway George

              Manservant at Bertram House in 1819; dismissed on September 15, 1820, when the Mitfords moved to Three Mile Cross, a much smaller establishment. He and his brother Frank buried Mossy. Dates unknown.

              Moses

                One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.

                Elizabeth James

                • Elizabeth Mary James
                • Miss James
                • Bath, Somerset, England
                • 3 Pembroke Villas, Richmond, Surrey, England
                Close friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. She was the eldest daughter of Thomas Webb and Susanna Haycock. Her father died in 1818 and her mother in 1835. After her parents’ deaths, she lived with her two younger sisters, Emily and Susan, in Green Park Buildings, Bath, Walcot, Somerset; High Street, Mortlake, Surrey; and 3 Pembroke Villas, Richmond, Surrey. According to Coles, referring to Mitford’s diary, letters were also addressed to her at Bellevue, Lower Road, Richmond (Coles 26). She was buried at St. Mary Magdalene, Richmond, Surrey. In the 1841 census, she is listed as living on independent means; in the 1851 census, as landholder; in the 1861 census, she as railway shareholder.

                Sarah Harriet Burney

                • Sarah Harriet Burney
                • Miss Burney
                • Lynn Regis, Norfolk, England
                • Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
                Daughter of Charles Burney by his second wife, Elizabeth Allen. Half sister to Frances Burney.

                Dr. Richard Valpy

                • Valpy Richard Doctor of Divinity
                • Dr. Valpy
                • St. John’s, Jersey, Channel Islands
                • Reading, Berkshire, England
                Richard Valpy (the fourth of that name) was the eldest son of Richard Valpy [III] and Catherine Chevalier. He was a friend and literary mentor to Mary Russell Mitford. He matriculated at Pembroke College, Oxford University on April 1, 1773, aged eighteen, as a Morley scholar. He received from Oxford a B.A. (1776), M.A. (1784), B.D. & D.D. (1792). He took orders in the Church of England in 1777. Richard Valpy served as Second Master at Bury School, Bury, Huntindonshire from 1771 to 1781, and was also collated to the rectory of Stradishall, Suffolk, in 1787. He became the Headmaster at Reading School, Reading, Berkshire, in 1781 and served until 1830, at which time he turned the Headmastership over to his youngest son Francis E. J. Valpy and continued in semi-retirement until his death in 1836. During his tenure as Headmaster of Reading Grammar School for boys over the course of fifty years, he expanded the boarding school and added new buildings. He is the author of numerous published works, including Greek and Latin textbooks, sermons, volumes of poetry, and adaptations of plays such as Shakespeare’s King John and Sheridan’s The Critic. His Elements of Greek Grammar, Elements of Latin Grammar,,Greek Delectus and Latin Delectus, printed and published by his son A. J. Valpy, were all much used as school texts throughout the nineteenth century. Valpy’s students performed his own adaptations of Greek, Latin, and English plays for the triennial visitations and the play receipts went to charitable organizations. Valpy enlisted Mitford to write reviews of the productions for the Reading Mercury. In 1803, his adaptation of Shakespeare’s King John was performed at Covent Garden Theatre.
                Richard Valpy was married twice and had twelve children, eleven of whom lived to adulthood. His first wife was Martha Cornelia de Cartaret; Richard and Martha were married about 1778 and they had one daughter, Martha Cartaretta Cornelia. His first wife Martha died about 1780 and he married Mary Benwell of Caversham, Oxfordshire on May 30, 1782. Together they had six sons and five daughters and ten of their eleven children survived to adulthood. Richard Valpy and Mary Benwell’s sons were Richard Valpy (the fifth of that name), Abraham John Valpy, called John; Gabriel Valpy, Anthony Blagrove Valpy; and Francis Edward Jackson Valpy. His daughters were Mary Ann Catherine Valpy; Sarah Frances Valpy, called Frances or Fanny; Catherine Elizabeth Blanch Valpy; Penelope Arabella Valpy; and Elizabeth Charlotte Valpy, who died as an infant.
                Richard Valpy died on March 28, 1836 in Reading, Berkshire, and is buried in All Souls cemetery, Kensal Green, London. Dr. Valpy’s students placed a marble bust of him in St. Lawrence’s church, Reading, Berkshire, after his death. John Opie painted Dr. Valpy’s portrait. See .

                Charles Dundas

                • Charles Dundas
                • 1st Baron Amesbury
                • Member of Parliament
                • Scotland
                • Pimlico, Westminster, London, England
                Member of Parliament for Berkshire from 1794 to 1832. He generally sided with liberal and refomist policies but was not an active party member. His first wife Anne brought him the estate of Kintbury-Amesbury (or Barton Court) in Berkshire as well as other property. He was also the first chairman of the Kennet and Avon Canal Company; the Dundas Aqueduct was named after him.

                            Rev. William Harness

                            • William Harness
                            • Wickham, Hampshire, England
                            • Battle, Sussex, England
                            A lifelong friend of Mary Russell Mitford who knew her from their childhood in the 1790s, Harness launched the first major effort to collect and edit Mitford’s letters into a series of volumes, which was completed by his assistant, Alfred Guy Kingan L’Estrange a year after Harness’s death, and published as The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Related in a Selection from her Letters to her Friends. This collection was originally intended to be six volumes, but was cut back to three by the publishers, to Harness’s distress. Harness and Byron were also friends from their schooling at Harrow, as Byron sympathized with Harness’s experience of a disabled foot, crushed in an accident in early childhood. Byron considered dedicating the first two cantos of Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage to Harness, but refrained so as not to taint Harness’s reputation as he was taking orders as an Anglican curate. Harness admired and encouraged Mitford’s playwrighting in particular, and she commented that he was one of the few of her friends who thought she should prioritize the drama over prose. When William Macready was attacked in an anonymous Blackwood’s Magazine piece in 1825 for his demands and rudeness to Mitford over revisions to Rienzi, Macready assumed that Harness was the author of the anonymous piece, though in 1839 after many years of distance, Harness assured Macready in person that he was not the writer, though he may have shared word of the poor treatment his friend had endured. William Harness was the son of John Harness, M.D. and Sarah Dredge; he was baptized at Whitchurch, Hampshire on April 13, 1790. He received his B.A. in 1812 and his M.A. in 1816 from Christ’s College, Cambridge. He served as curate at Kelmeston, Hampshire (1812) and Dorking (1814-1816). He was preacher at Trinity Chapel, Conduit Street, London and minister and lecturer at St. Anne’s in Soho. He was Boyle lecturer in London (1822) and was curate at Hampstead from 1828 to 1844. In 1825, he published an eight-volume edition of Shakespeare, including a biography; his friends would later endow a prize in his name at Cambridge for the study of Shakespearean literature. He also authored numerous essays and reviews, some for the Quarterly Review. From 1844 to 1847 he was minister of Brompton Chapel in London. He undertook to raise the funds to build the church of All Saints, Knightsbridge, in the parish of St. Margaret’s Westminster, which opened in 1849, and he then became perpetual curate of that congregation. At the 1851 and 1861 censuses, he lived at 3 Hyde Park Terrace, Westminster St. Margaret, Middlesex, with his sister Mary Harness and his first cousin Jemima Harness, daughter of his uncle William. He died while on a visit to one of his former curates in Battle, Sussex. At the time of his death he living at the same address at 3 Hyde Park Terrace; he is buried in Bath.Sources: Duncan-Jones, Miss Mitford and Mr. Harness (1955); Lord Byron and His Times:

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