[hardy-l] Julia Augusta Pitney Martin of Kingston Maurward
Charles.Anesi at wellsfargo.com
Charles.Anesi at wellsfargo.com
Mon Apr 27 08:27:17 PDT 2009
This is fascinating -- wonder how much this contributed to Hardy's interest in naval matters.
Minor suggestion -- instead of "American civil war " put "American War of Independence" or "American Revolutionary War". On the west side of the Atlantic we use the term "Civil War" to refer to the War of Southern Insurrection, or War Between the States, depending on what part of the country you are from. Might say "Admiral Sir George Collier (1738-1795), British naval hero of the American Revolutionary War." I agree that Collier was a very capable sea officer.
Chuck Anesi
charles.anesi at wellsfargo.com<mailto:charles.anesi at wellsfargo.com>
office 480-575-3478
cell 612-940-3345
fax 480-575-3519
** These opinions are strictly my own and not necessarily those of Wells Fargo **
This message may contain confidential and/or privileged information. If you are not the addressee or authorized to receive this for the addressee, you must not use, copy, disclose, or take any action based on this message or any information herein. If you have received this message in error, please advise the sender immediately by reply e-mail and delete this message. Thank you for your cooperation.
________________________________
From: Betty Cortus [mailto:bcortus at HARDY-L.COM]
Sent: Monday, April 27, 2009 6:51 AM
To: HARDY-L
Subject: [hardy-l] Julia Augusta Pitney Martin of Kingston Maurward
Dear All,
This message comes from David Waller whose new book, The Magnificent Mrs Tennant,
promises to be of interest to many of us.
Betty
Hardy scholars and enthusiasts may be interested to know that more
details on Julia Augusta Pitney Martin have come to light. Julia, it
will be remembered, was proprietress of the Kingston Maurward estate,
near Hardy's childhood home at Lower Bockampton. She took the young
Hardy under her wing, giving the boy lessons in the study at Kingston
Maurward. She made a big impression on the author and biographers have
noted that he wrote her and her splendid home into a number of
stories, including the suggestively titled The Poor Man and the Lady
-- but have otherwise drawn a blank as to her own family background.
During the course of my researches into the life of Gertrude Tennant
(1819-1918), I discovered that Julia Augusta was Gertrude's cousin
and, as can now be revealed, the daughter of Admiral Sir Francis
Augustus Collier (1783-1849) and grand-daughter of Admiral Sir George
Collier (1738-1795), a hero of the American civil war. Admiral Sir
Francis served with Nelson and had a distinguished naval career,
ending his life in Hong Kong. For further details, please consult my
forthcoming The Magnificent Mrs Tennant, to be published by Yale
University Press next month. Gertrude spent her honeymoon at Kingston
Maurward in late 1847.
David Waller (davidwalle at gmail.com<mailto:davidwalle at gmail.com>)
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://coyote.csusm.edu/pipermail/hardy-l/attachments/20090427/f2544d6e/attachment.html
More information about the Hardy-l
mailing list