Caroline Fox

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Caroline Fox[1][2][3]

Caroline Fox (24 May 1819 – 12 January 1871) was an English diarist and correspondent from Cornwall. Her diary records memories of several notabilities, including John Stuart Mill and Thomas Carlyle.

Biography[]

Caroline Fox was born 24 May 1819 at Penjerrick, a large house near Falmouth,[4] as one of five children of Robert Were Fox FRS, an inventor, from the influential Fox family of Falmouth and his wife, Maria Barclay. Both were Quakers. She was the younger sister of Barclay Fox, also a diarist,[5] and of Anna Maria Fox.[6]

Caroline's well-known diaries record memories of distinguished people such as John Stuart Mill, John Sterling and Thomas Carlyle. Selections from her diary and letters (1835–1871) appeared as Memories of Old Friends: Caroline Fox of Penjerrick, Cornwall.[7][8] A selection from the Victorian edition appeared in 1972.[9]

Gravestone of Caroline and Anna Maria Fox in Budock Quaker Burial Ground, Falmouth

Caroline Fox and her sister Anna Maria helped to found the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society in Falmouth.[4]

Caroline Fox died on 12 January 1871 and was buried in the Quaker Burial Ground at Budock.[4]

Further reading[]

  • Fox, Caroline (1972). Wendy Monk (ed.). The journals of Caroline Fox, 1835–1871: a selection. London: Paul Elek. ISBN 0-236-15447-8.
  • (1980). Caroline Fox, Quaker blue-stocking 1819–1871, friend of John Stuart Mill, Thomas and Jane Carlyle, Frederick Denison Maurice and helper of sailors in distress. York: Sessions. ISBN 0-900657-54-5.
  • Harris, Wilson (1944). Caroline Fox. London: Constable..[10]

Notes and references[]

  1. ^ Fox, Caroline (1883). Horace N. Pym (ed.). Memories of Old Friends. London: Smith, Elder, and Co. – Frontispiece, from an etching by Sir Hubert Herkomer, after a painting by Samuel Laurence, depicting Caroline Fox, age 27. Volume 1 available online at Internet Archive and Volume 2 at Internet Archive
  2. ^ Robinson, William (1891). Friends of a Half Century. London: Edward Hicks. p. 138. Retrieved 9 December 2007. caroline fox – page 138
  3. ^ Fox (1883)
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Biography. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
  5. ^ Her brother's journal was published in 1979, in a scholarly edition.
  6. ^ Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy, eds., The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present, London: Batsford, 1990, p. 390.
  7. ^ Edited by H. N. Pym, 1881; 2nd edition, 1882.
  8. ^ For detail on this and her relations with members of the Fox family, see Horace Pym.
  9. ^ The Journals of Caroline Fox, 1835–1871: A Selection, ed. Wendy Monk; London, Paul Elek, (1972) ISBN 0-236-15447-8; ODNB V. E. Chancellor, "Fox, Caroline (1819–1871)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 retrieved 13 June 2006.
  10. ^ (Henry) Wilson Harris (1883–1955), journalist and author (Biographer of Caroline Fox), appears in ODNB: Derek Hudson, "Harris, (Henry) Wilson (1883–1955)", rev. Marc Brodie, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [1], retrieved 10 December 2007] His parents were Plymouth Quakers.
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