Caroline Haddon (15 April 1837 – 13 March 1905) was a British philosophical writer. She was the sister-in-law of James Hinton, "the great influence of her life",[1] and she wrote several works about Hinton and his thought.
Life
editCaroline Haddon was born on 15 April 1837 in Finsbury, the daughter of John Haddon and Elizabeth Cort.[2]
Haddon ran a girls' school in Dover. She paid for Havelock Ellis to pursue his study of medicine at St Thomas's Hospital.[3] Together with her sister Margaret and Havelock Ellis, she championed Hinton's evolutionary mysticism within the Fellowship of the New Life.[4] She supported Hinton's advocacy of polygamy, notably in an outspoken 1885 pamphlet The Future of Marriage which scandalised London radicals at the time, especially as rumour maintained that she had had an affair with Hinton before his death in 1875.[5] In a talk she gave to the Fabian Society, 'The Two Socialisms', she was the first at the society to use the word 'socialism'.[6]
Haddon died on 13 March 1905.[7]
Works
edit- (ed.) Philosophy and Religion: selections from the MSS. of J. Hinton by James Hinton, London: Kegan and Paul, 1881.
- A Law of Development: An Essay, London: J. Haddon, 1883
- The Larger Life: Studies in Hinton's Ethics, London: Kegan and Paul, 1886.
- Where does your interest come from?: a word to lady investors, 1886
References
edit- ^ Ellis, Havelock (2005). Three Modern Seers: James Hinton, Nietzsche Edward Carpenter. Kessinger Publishing. pp. 58–9. ISBN 978-1-4179-7231-9. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- ^ Caroline Haddon, ancestry.com
- ^ Weir, Neir. "Hinton, James (1822–1875), otologist and writer on philosophy". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13354. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Bevir, Mark (2011). The Making of British Socialism. Princeton University Press. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-691-15083-3. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- ^ Gerry Kennedy, The Booles and the Hintons, Atrium Press, July 2016 pp 141-152
- ^ Pease, Edward R. (1925). The History of the Fabian Society. Library of Alexandria. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-4655-0248-3. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- ^ The London Gazette, 15 June 1906, p.4173