Mathilda Foy
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Mathilda (or ''Mathilde'') Foy (or ''Foj''), also known as ''Tante Esther'', (10 November 1813 – 1 November 1869), was a Swedish philanthropist and writer, known for her charitable work. She is known as a pioneer of the
Sunday school A Sunday school is an educational institution, usually (but not always) Christian in character. Other religions including Buddhism, Islam, and Judaism have also organised Sunday schools in their temples and mosques, particularly in the West. Su ...
, and as the co-founder of the charity organisation ''
Fruntimmersällskapet för fångars förbättring Fruntimmersällskapet för fångars förbättring ('Women's Society for the Reform of Prisoners') was a charitable society founded in Stockholm in Sweden in 1854. The purpose of the society was to visit female prisoners and work for their rehabilita ...
'' ('Women's Society for the Improvement of Prisoners') in 1854.


Biography


Childhood

Foy was born in Stockholm in 1813. She was the daughter of the British
consul Consul (abbrev. ''cos.''; Latin plural ''consules'') was the title of one of the two chief magistrates of the Roman Republic, and subsequently also an important title under the Roman Empire. The title was used in other European city-states throug ...
in Stockholm, George Foy, and his Swedish wife Mathilda Augusta Skoge. As a girl, Foy spent the summer of 1835 at the Medevi mineral spa with her parents. Her diary gives a detailed insight into life at the spa, both the daily practicalities and her thoughts and feelings. Cultural historian Gustaf Näsström, in his book , retells a love story from the diary that brings to mind
Jane Austen Jane Austen (; 16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. Austen's plots of ...
writing a novel about events in Bath.


Religious influences and Sunday school

In Stockholm as a young woman, Foy was likely influenced by
Methodist Methodism, also called the Methodist movement, is a group of historically related denominations of Protestant Christianity whose origins, doctrine and practice derive from the life and teachings of John Wesley. George Whitefield and John's b ...
minister
Joseph Rayner Stephens Joseph Rayner Stephens (8 March 1805 – 18 February 1879) was a Methodist minister who offended the Wesleyan Conference by his support for separating the Church of England from the State. Resigning from the Wesleyan Connection, he became free t ...
and by his successor George Scott. Scott's preaching in Swedish was controversial as at the time, any preaching outside the
Church of Sweden The Church of Sweden ( sv, Svenska kyrkan) is an Evangelical Lutheran national church in Sweden. A former state church, headquartered in Uppsala, with around 5.6 million members at year end 2021, it is the largest Christian denomination in Sw ...
was forbidden due to the Conventicle Act. The person with the greatest religious impact on her, however, was Lutheran
Pietist Pietism (), also known as Pietistic Lutheranism, is a movement within Lutheranism that combines its emphasis on biblical doctrine with an emphasis on individual piety and living a holy Christianity, Christian life, including a social concern for ...
revivalist preacher
Carl Olof Rosenius Carl Olof Rosenius (February 3, 1816 – February 24, 1868) was a Swedish lay preacher, author and editor of the monthly ''Pietisten'' (The Pietist) from 1842 to 1868.''Twice-Born Hymns'' by J. Irving Erickson, (Chicago: Covenant Press, 1976) ...
. She was introduced to him in the early 1840s through missionary
Theodore Hamberg Theodore Hamberg () (25 March 1819 – 13 May 1854) was a Swedish missionary and author active in China. He is known for his role in having authored an important account on the early Taiping rebellion and for his role in establishing Christian m ...
, who worked for her father and had a close relationship with the Foy family as his own father had died when he was young. Hamberg had heard Rosenius' preaching and, impressed, convinced Foy to come to a meeting. Foy described it as a turning point. She became part of the ''
läsare (lit. 'reader') or the Reader movement was a Swedish Pietistic Christian revival movement of people who stressed the importance of reading (), that is, reading the Bible and other Christian literature. It was influenced by both the Herrnhute ...
'' (lit. 'reader') movement, like Rosenius. Prior to
Sunday schools A Sunday school is an educational institution, usually (but not always) Christian in character. Other religions including Buddhism, Islam, and Judaism have also organised Sunday schools in their temples and mosques, particularly in the West. Su ...
becoming more mainstream in Sweden in the 1850s and beyond, Foy began a Sunday school in 1843–1844. However, the clergy rejected it since it seemed "Methodist" and they believed it was inappropriate for a woman to take over their function. As a result, it was ultimately scrapped.


Diaconal work

In 1851, Foy was, alongside
deaconess The ministry of a deaconess is, in modern times, a usually non-ordained ministry for women in some Protestant, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern Orthodox churches to provide pastoral care, especially for other women, and which may carry a limited ...
Maria Cederschiöld Hedvig ''Maria'' Reddita Cederschiöld (29 June 1856, Stockholm – 19 October 1935, Stockholm), was a Swedish journalist and women's rights activist. She was the chief editor of the foreign office at ''Aftonbladet'' in 1909–1921, and the first ...
as the director, on the board of directors at the newly founded Deaconess Institution, the first one in Sweden, founded that same year in Stockholm.Elisabeth Christiansson, ''”Först och framför allt själen" – diakonins tankevärld omkring år 1850'': Sköndalsinstitutets Arbetsrapportserie nr 32 In 1854, she co-founded the ('Women's Society for the Improvement of Prisoners') together with Cederschiöld,
Fredrika Bremer Fredrika Bremer (17 August 1801 – 31 December 1865) was a Finnish-born Swedish writer and feminist reformer. Her ''Sketches of Everyday Life'' were wildly popular in Britain and the United States during the 1840s and 1850s and she is re ...
,
Betty Ehrenborg Betty Ehrenborg, married name Posse af Säby (22 July 1818 – 22 July 1880), was a Swedish writer, psalm writer and pedagogue. She is regarded as the founder of the Swedish Sunday school. Life Katarina Elisabeth (nicknamed Betty) Ehrenborg was ...
, and
Emilia Elmblad Emilia may refer to: People * Emilia (given name), list of people with this name Places * Emilia (region), a historical region of Italy. Reggio, Emilia * Emilia-Romagna, an administrative region in Italy, including the historical regions of Emi ...
. Visits to female inmates were intended to boost their morale and develop their character via religious education. They were met by resistance from the prison authorities as well as the prison chaplain. Ehrenborg took charge of the
vagrants Vagrancy is the condition of homelessness without regular employment or income. Vagrants (also known as bums, vagabonds, rogues, tramps or drifters) usually live in poverty and support themselves by begging, scavenging, petty theft, temporar ...
, Cederschiöld the thieves and Foy the child murderers, while Bremer jumped in where she was needed, and whenever Ehrenborg was absent, she took over the vagrants, among whom she felt very comfortable and even identified with:
Had it not been for the way I was brought up and my social position, I may have belonged with them. I do not believe I would have murdered my children or any other person, nor would I have stolen, it seemed to me to be so vulgar. But to run along the streets and scream and argue, drink me intoxicated, use foul language and insult the police; that would have been more in my taste. I would have found that amusing!
In 1868, Foy and Cederschiöld founded a Deaconess Institute in
Jämtland Jämtland (; no, Jemtland or , ; Jamtish: ''Jamtlann''; la, Iemptia) is a historical province () in the centre of Sweden in northern Europe. It borders Härjedalen and Medelpad to the south, Ångermanland to the east, Lapland to the north a ...
and
Norway Norway, officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a Nordic country in Northern Europe, the mainland territory of which comprises the western and northernmost portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula. The remote Arctic island of Jan Mayen and t ...
.


Herrestad Grandmother

Foy wrote several times about Emilie Petersen, known as ('the Herrestad Grandmother'), a woman famed for her charitable work institutions on her estate, whom she often visited. In 1855, she described her first prayer for missions work there: In 1858, four anonymous pamphlets, 32 pages each in small format 100 x 67 mm, were published by the cantor Per Palmquist (1815–1887), including "Mormor på Herrestad". In it, Foy tells how it was not possible to be idle at Petersen's: "One was carried along by a current and one was ashamed if one was not in a hurry." She had to find six Bible quotes with the word ''head'' in them in order to sew six small hats "to be sent to Lapland to the poor children in the schools there"; when she found eleven Bible quotes, it was not a question of choosing six of them, but of sewing five more hats. Foy also tells how Petersen became a purveyor to the court, how she started a working society with help from her native Germany in a time of severe famine, and how King
Charles XIV John sv, Karl Johan Baptist Julius , spouse = , issue = Oscar I of Sweden , house = Bernadotte , father = Henri Bernadotte , mother = Jeanne de Saint-Jean , birth_date = , birth_place = Pau, ...
– because it was written in foreign newspapers without his knowledge that Sweden's distress required foreign aid – sent the governor to investigate the situation; the result of the governor's report was that the king placed an order for 1,500
riksdaler The svenska riksdaler () was the name of a Swedish coin first minted in 1604. Between 1777 and 1873, it was the currency of Sweden. The daler, like the dollar,''National Geographic''. June 2002. p. 1. ''Ask Us''. was named after the German Thaler. ...
worth of cloth annually for as long as he lived and she continued with her workers' association. In 1853–1859, Foy wrote about Petersen and her efforts in the English journal ''Evangelical Christendom''.


Legacy

Today, Foy is counted among 300 , listed in ''Commemoratives of Famous Women'', as well as one of "Three names which are often put alongside Frederika Bremer in reference to the Christian charity work of the 1850s" in Sweden alongside Maria Cederschiöld and Betty Ehrenborg.


Works

*1858–1860 editor for ''Christelig månadsskrift för barn'', kantorn P. Palmquist förlag (died 1887); various contributions under the pseudonym 'Tante Ester' *1858 ''Mormor på Herrestad'', 32 p., published by P. Palmqvist. Stockholm *1858 ''Missionsbönerna på Herrestad'', 32 p., published by P. Palmqvist. Stockholm *1860 ''Din tid är Herrans! Ett bref från Götheborg af M. F.'', published by P. Palmqvist. Stockholm, P. P. Elde & c,. rojekt Runeberg*1865 ''Alpernas Israel, eller Valdenserna förr och nu / af M.F.'' rom_Alexis_Muston,_''L'Israel_des_Alpes'',_Paris_1852.html" ;"title="Alexis_Muston.html" ;"title="rom Alexis Muston">rom Alexis Muston, ''L'Israel des Alpes'', Paris 1852">Alexis_Muston.html" ;"title="rom Alexis Muston">rom Alexis Muston, ''L'Israel des Alpes'', Paris 1852ref>:sv:Valdenser
*1866 ''Fru Lawsons hem, af M. F.,'' published by P. Palmqvist, Stockholm, A. Holmberg & s., *1866'' Ingen krona för mig!'', adapted from the French by M.F., P. Palmqvist. Stockholm, A.Holmberg & c.


References


Further reading

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Foy, Mathilda 1813 births 1869 deaths Swedish philanthropists 19th-century Swedish writers Swedish people of English descent 19th-century Swedish women writers 19th-century philanthropists Pietists 19th-century women philanthropists