Catherine Marsh or Miss C. M. Marsh (15 September 1818 – 12 December 1912) was an English philanthropist and author writing about soldiers and navvies during the 1850s.
Catherine Marsh | |
---|---|
Born | Colchester | 15 September 1818
Died | 12 December 1912 Feltwell | (aged 94)
Pen name | Miss Marsh |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
Life
editMarsh was born in Colchester at the vicarage for St Peter's church in 1818. Her mother was Maria Chowne (born Tilson) and her father was William Marsh, a clergyman with whom she lived all her life. In 1854 she was concerned about the soldiers bound for the Crimean War. She decided to write about the short life of a Christian soldier and Memorials of Captain Hedley Vicars was published in 1855. It was well read and 78,000 copies were sold in the first twelve months. Two years later she published a similar work English Hearts and English Hands which sympathetically described the navvy's life having witnessed the workers who had been re-building the Crystal Palace.[1] That book led to an exchange of letters with Julia Wightman who was an advocate for Temperance in Shrewsbury. In 1859 Wightman published her own book that included many of the letters.[2]
Marsh published The Life of Arthur Vandeleur, Major, Royal Artillery in 1862.[3]
In 1866 there was an outbreak of cholera and Marsh created a convalescent home in Brighton.[1] The following year she published a biography of her father[4] who had died in 1864.[1]
Marsh died in Feltwell rectory in Norfolk in 1912.[1]
Five years after her death in 1917, The Life and Friendships of Catherine Marsh by Lucy Elizabeth Marshall O'Rorke was published.[5]
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Marsh, William (1775–1864), Church of England clergyman". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18116. Retrieved 29 March 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Wightman, Julia Bainbrigge (1859). Haste to the rescue; or, Work while it is day. By mrs. Charles W.
- ^ Marsh, Catherine (1863). The Life of Arthur Vandeleur, Major, Royal Artillery. American Tract Society.
- ^ Marsh, Catherine (1867). The life of the Rev. William Marsh, D.D. London: James Nisbet. OCLC 5232596.
- ^ "Catherine Marsh". Library of Nineteenth-Century Photography. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
External links
edit- Media related to Catherine Marsh at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by or about Catherine Marsh at Wikisource