Eliza Lawrence (educator)
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Sarah Lawrence (1780–1859) was an English educator, writer and literary editor. She ran a girls' school in Gateacre near Liverpool, and was a family friend of the Aikins of Warrington, and an associate of members of the Roscoe circle.


Early life

The Lawrence family were self-consciously descendants, in the fifth generation, of
Philip Henry Philip Henry (24 August 1631 – 24 June 1696) was an English Nonconformist clergyman and diarist. His son Matthew Henry was a notable commentator on the Bible and also a Presbyterian minister. Early life Philip Henry was born at Whitehall, L ...
(1631–1696), an ejected minister. Sarah was one of nine daughters and two sons (two daughters and one son dying young) of Nathaniel Lawrence of Birmingham, who married in 1777 Mary Johnson. The family belonged to the congregation of the Old Meeting House on Worcester Street. Nathaniel was a chapel warden in 1785. Both the Old Meeting House, and the New Meeting House on Moor Street, were destroyed in the first phase of the 1791
Priestley Riots The Priestley Riots (also known as the Birmingham Riots of 1791) took place from 14 July to 17 July 1791 in Birmingham, England; the rioters' main targets were religious dissenters, most notably the politically and theologically controversial Jo ...
, on the orders of an under-sheriff and two magistrates. In 1793 Nathaniel Lawrence lost his business in a financial slump. A Nathaniel Lawrence of Birmingham declared bankrupt that year was a wine merchant. Mary Lawrence and her daughters set up a girls' school in Birmingham. Eliza, the eldest daughter, at this time spent a period as a
governess A governess is a largely obsolete term for a woman employed as a private tutor, who teaches and trains a child or children in their home. A governess often lives in the same residence as the children she is teaching. In contrast to a nanny, th ...
, as did other sisters, Sarah among them. Mary's plan was that her daughters should spend time in other families, coming together later in a family-run school. In Sarah's case, she was a governess in the household of
Peter Crompton Peter Crompton (1765–1833) was an English physician, political radical and brewer. Early life Crompton was from a Derby family, the third son of Joshua Crompton (died 1770), a banker there, and his wife Elizabeth Colthurst. He attended Warringt ...
of Eton House, a radical physician and anti-corruption campaigner in Liverpool.


The school at Gateacre

After the death of her parents Nathaniel and Mary, Sarah Lawrence, described as "a writer, poet and good Horatian scholar", with other members of her family founded a school for girls in Gatacre near Liverpool in 1807; she became the principal. It built up a good reputation. There was an existing successful school in Gateacre, run by the Unitarian minister
William Shepherd William McMichael "Bill" Shepherd (born July 26, 1949), (Capt, USN, Ret.), is an American former Navy SEAL, aerospace, ocean, and mechanical engineer, and NASA astronaut, who served as Commander of Expedition 1, the first crew on the Internatio ...
. Together, in early decades of the 19th century, the two schools at Gateacre were "where the sons and daughters of the merchant aristocracy of Liverpool were educated". Schools of this time run in accordance with Unitarian views might do so tacitly, and attract pupils from
Anglican Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of th ...
families. The Lawrences' school has been considered Unitarian, in a group with
Lant Carpenter Lant Carpenter, Dr. (2 September 1780 – 5 or 6 April 1840) was an English educator and Christian Unitarianism, Unitarian Minister (Christianity), minister. Early life Lant Carpenter was born in Kidderminster, the third son of George Carpenter ...
's school in Bristol, and locally the Everton school founded by the Swiss educator Carl Voelker. Sarah Lawrence subscribed to the 1823 book of sermons of Henry Turner (died 1822), minister of the Unitarian High Pavement Chapel in Nottingham, as did Miss Benton of Gateacre, who in 1815 was advertising a preparatory school for boys 5 to 15 there, giving Shepherd, the Miss Lawrences and the Rev. Christopher Wyvill as references. Advertising a school in
Allerton, Liverpool Allerton is a suburb of Liverpool, England. Historically in Lancashire, it is located southeast of the city centre and is bordered by the suburbs of Garston, Hunt's Cross, Mossley Hill, and Woolton. It has a number of large houses in the pres ...
in 1828, Voelker and Staehle used as references Sarah Lawrence, Thomas Stewart Traill and the Rev. Augustus Campbell of Childwall. Another successful founder of a Unitarian school, near Wakefield, was
Richmal Mangnall Richmal Mangnall (1769–1820) was an English schoolmistress and the writer of a famous schoolbook, ''Mangnall's Questions''. This had been through 84 editions by 1857. She became the headmistress of Crofton Hall, a successful Yorkshire school, ...
. After a generation Sarah Lawrence's school suffered from financial limitations and parsimony, and it was taken over in 1839, transferred to the Misses Holland. By this time, there was a fashionable boys' preparatory school at Gateacre, run by Miss Hunt, and attended by
Edmund Knowles Muspratt Edmund Knowles Muspratt (6 November 1833 – 1 September 1923) was an English chemical industrialist. Early life and background Edmund Knowles Muspratt was born in Seaforth, near Liverpool, England, the fourth and youngest son of James Muspra ...
and Henry Enfield Roscoe.


Location and aftermath

The Hollands' school was called at this point Gateacre School. They left it around 1863. On the site,
Cornelius Sherlock Cornelius Sherlock (bapt. 28 February 1823 – 20 January 1888) was a British architect who was active in Liverpool in North West England in the late 19th century. Sherlock is best known as one of the architects responsible for the Walker Art G ...
built for
Andrew Barclay Walker Sir Andrew Barclay Walker, 1st Baronet (15 December 1824 – 27 February 1893) was a brewer and Liverpool Councillor. Career Walker was born the son of Peter Walker at Auchinflower, Ayrshire, and was educated at Ayr Academy and at the Liverpo ...
Gatacre Grange, in 1866.


Pupils and their backgrounds

Helen Bourn (1797–1871), a pupil at the school, came from a "distinguished middle-class family", but also one with a long tradition of nonconformist ministry, from her great-grandfather Samuel Bourn the younger. She was an only child, her father Joseph Bourn being in business, probably textiles, and living in Bolton le Moors; her mother was Ellen Gaskell. Her father made difficulties about her first marriage, requiring that her fiancé should give up his medical career and move to north-west England as a fustian manufacturer. She married Thomas Martineau, brother of Harriet Martineau, was widowed, and married
Edward Tagart Edward Tagart (8 October 1804 – 12 October 1858) was an English Unitarian divine. Biography Tagart was born at Bristol and educated there and at Bath Grammar School (King Edward's School, Bath). In 1820 he entered the dissenting theological ...
. The background of Dorothy Nicholson (1803–1893) who attended the Lawrences' school was nonconformist, mercantile and politically radical: her father Thomas Nicholson (1753–1825) of Gorton Hall was a cousin of Frances Nicholson (died 1829), Shepherd's wife, daughter of the Liverpool merchant Robert Nicholson (1727–1779) who was abolitionist and a governor of Warrington Academy; and she had early memories of the chant "Roscoe for ever!" of 1807. Dorothy was given tuition in the classics by Shepherd. Jane Ashton (1806–1884) from the Manchester area, maternal grandmother of Beatrix Potter, attended the school. She was the daughter of John Ashton (1777–1845), a Unitarian and cotton manufacturer in Hyde, and his wife Harriot or Harriet Booth; and the sister of Thomas Ashton. She married John Leech, a cotton merchant in
Stalybridge Stalybridge () is a town in Tameside, Greater Manchester, England, with a population of 23,731 at the 2011 Census. Historic counties of England, Historically divided between Cheshire and Lancashire, it is east of Manchester city centre and no ...
. Catharine Aikin (Kitty, c.1819–1908) was a daughter of Charles Rochemont Aikin, son of Anna Laetitia Barbauld, and his wife Anne, daughter of
Gilbert Wakefield Gilbert Wakefield (1756–1801) was an English scholar and controversialist. He moved from being a cleric and academic, into tutoring at dissenting academies, and finally became a professional writer and publicist. In a celebrated state trial ...
, who died when she was two. Born in London, she attended the school for about 15 months around 1833, finding it an austere, strict place with only cold water to wash in, of around 40 girl boarders. In the early history of
Bedford College, London file:Bedford College in York place - photographer is unknown but guess 1908.png, Bedford College was in York Place after 1874 Bedford College was founded in London in 1849 as the first higher education college for education of women, women in th ...
, she served as Secretary to the Lady Visitors, a group of board members responsible for discipline.


Family associations

Hannah Mary Rathbone Hannah Mary Rathbone (5 July 1798, in Shropshire – 26 March 1878, in Liverpool) was an English writer and the author of ''The Diary of Lady Willoughby''. Life Reynolds was born in 1798. Her parents were Joseph Reynolds and Deborah (born Dearman ...
, the author of ''The Diary of Lady Willoughby''. kept a diary, in which Mary Crompton (the wife of Peter Crompton), her daughter, and Sarah Lawrence appear as a group of visitors in August 1805, and in October 1809. The first occasion is noted as "Miss Lawrence". Sara Coleridge, wife of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, visited the Cromptons and then the Lawrences in Birmingham at the end of 1806. Eliza Lawrence took care of Catherine Emmet, orphaned daughter of Christopher Temple Emmet. William Drennan, who had met Catherine at the Cromptons, wrote to his sister that "Miss L is a singularly interesting girl", and that "Holmes is expected in England to take away Miss Emmet" from the school. Eliza married in 1810 Robert Holmes, Catherine's great-uncle, as his second wife, and died in 1811. Catherine, after a short period in the United States, then went to live with William Hazlitt at Addlestone. In 1825 there were five surviving sisters, Eliza and Frances having died as adults: in order of age, Sarah, Mary, Arabella, Jane, and Harriet, none of whom married. William Rowan Hamilton was given a letter of introduction to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, by Sarah. This was in 1832 at the end of Coleridge's life: he replied to a letter from Sarah recalling memories of her and
Peter Crompton Peter Crompton (1765–1833) was an English physician, political radical and brewer. Early life Crompton was from a Derby family, the third son of Joshua Crompton (died 1770), a banker there, and his wife Elizabeth Colthurst. He attended Warringt ...
's wife Mary. Sarah Lawrence was a close friend of Arthur Aikin, and Charles Rochemont Aikin and family. She corresponded with Arthur, and Helen Martineau, sister-in-law of Harriet Martineau. Manuscripts from the correspondence with Martineau contain poems that have been attributed to Anna Letitia Barbauld, though they are in Lawrence's hand. It was in a letter to Sarah that Arthur described the last days of Anna Letitia, his aunt.


Works

* ''Stories Selected from the History of Greece, for Children'' (1820) * ''The Descendants of Philip Henry, M.A., Incumbent of Worthenbury, in the County of Flint'' (1844) Sarah worked on this project, which began with a family tree made by Helen Martineau, from about 1840, with
Samuel Sharpe Samuel Sharpe, or Sharp (1801 – 23 May 1832), also known as Sam Sharpe, was an enslaved Jamaican who was the leader of the widespread 1831–32 Baptist War slave rebellion (also known as the Christmas Rebellion) in Jamaica. He was proclaim ...
. The Sharpes were introduced to the Lawrence sisters by the family of
Edwin Wilkins Field Edwin Wilkins Field (12 October 1804 – 30 July 1871) was a British lawyer and painter who committed much of his life to law reform. Early life Edwin, a descendant of Oliver Cromwell through his grandmother, was the eldest of thirteen children ...
. * ''The Laurel: Fugitive Poetry of the Nineteenth Century'' (1841), editor of the anthology. * ''Poems'' (1847)


Later lives and deaths

Leaving Gateacre in 1839, the sisters moved to
Leamington Spa Royal Leamington Spa, commonly known as Leamington Spa or simply Leamington (), is a spa town and civil parish in Warwickshire, England. Originally a small village called Leamington Priors, it grew into a spa town in the 18th century following ...
. They lived at 2 Warwick Place. Jane Lawrence died in 1842. Sarah Lawrence died, at home in Warwick Place, on 20 July 1859. Harriet (given as "Harriette") died there on 10 March 1863. Mary Lawrence who died at Warwick Place, Leamington Spa, a few weeks later, formerly of "The Grange, Gatacre", presumably, was her sister.
Arabella Lawrence Arabella Lawrence (1787–1873) was an English educator, one of the Lawrence sisters, General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, Unitarians who ran a noted school at Gatacre, Gateacre. She is now known as a tutor for Ada Lovelace i ...
died at home, in Warwick Place, Leamington Spa, on 13 August 1873. She was the last survivor of the Lawrence sisters.


Next generations

Sarah's brother Nathaniel Lawrence the younger married Francis Sarah Ogden, daughter of
Abraham Ogden Abraham Ogden (December 30, 1743 – January 31, 1798) was an American lawyer and politician who served as U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey from 1791 to 1798 and negotiated the Treaty of New York (1796). Early life Ogden was born ...
, in 1815. He had been in the United States since at least 1810. He died in 1824. There were three sons and two daughters of the marriage, the eldest son Robert Holmes Lawrence dying young. One of the sons was Philip Henry Lawrence (1822–1895). He was brought up by the Lawrence sisters, his aunts, as was his brother Nathaniel Tertius Lawrence. Mary Lawrence, one of the daughters, might be confused with her aunt of the same name. Sarah Frances, the other daughter, married in 1837 William Talbot, a solicitor in Kidderminster; they had four sons and two daughters.
Penelope Lawrence Penelope "P.L." Lawrence aka Nelly (10 November 1856 – 3 July 1932) was a British co-founder of Roedean School in Brighton with her half sisters, Dorothy Lawrence and Millicent Lawrence. Life Lawrence was born in the Hyde Park, London. Her mo ...
, founder with her half-sisters of Roedean School, was the daughter of Philip Henry Lawrence and his first wife Charlotte Bailey;
Susan Lawrence Arabella Susan Lawrence (12 August 1871 – 24 October 1947) was a British Labour Party politician, one of the earliest female Labour MPs. Early life Lawrence was the youngest daughter of Nathaniel Tertius Lawrence, a wealthy solicitor, and ...
the politician was the daughter of Nathaniel Tertius Lawrence and his wife Laura Bacon, daughter of James Bacon. Laura Frances, eldest daughter of Nathaniel Tertius Lawrence, married in 1884 Henry Turton Norton, and was mother of
Jane Elizabeth Norton Jane Elizabeth Norton (25 October 1893 – 24 November 1962) was an English librarian and bibliographer, bibliographer of Edward Gibbon and editor of his correspondence.'Miss Jane Norton: Bibliographer of Gibbon', ''The Times'', 28 November 1962 ...
and Henry Turton James Norton.


Notes


External links


''Nathaniel Lawrence Family of Liverpool, Lancashire''
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lawrence, Sarah 1780 births 1859 deaths English educators English poets People from Birmingham, West Midlands