Maria Louisa Charlesworth

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Maria Louisa Charlesworth (1 October 1819 in The Rectory, Blakenham Parva – 6 January 1880 in Nutfield, Surrey) was an English author of religious books.[1]

Life

Maria Charlesworth was the daughter of John Charlesworth (1782-1864), an Evangelical clergyman who was rector of Flowton when Maria was born and later rector of a London parish.[2] A visitor in her father's parish from a young age, Maria Charlesworth drew on her experiences for The Female Visitor to the Poor (1846), as well as the fictionalised Ministering Children (1854). Ministering Children, set in a town modelled on Ipswich, sold over 170,000 copies during her lifetime – designed to teach children by example, it was especially popular as a 'reward book' for Sunday school prizes – and was translated into French, German and Swedish.[3]

On her father's death in 1864 Maria Charlesworth lived for a while with her clergyman brother in Limehouse and then sent up a ragged school and a mission in Bermondsey.[3] She retired to Nutfield in Surrey, where she died on 16 October 1880.[4]

Works

  • The Female Visitor to the Poor, 1846
  • Ministering children, 1854
  • Africa's Mountain Valley, 1865
  • A Sequel to Ministering Children, 1867
  • Oliver of the Mill, 1876
  • The Old Looking-Glass; or Mrs. Dorothy Cope's Recollections of Service, 1877
  • Sunday Afternoons in the Nursery, or Familiar Narratives from the Book of Genesis, 1885.

References

  1. Maria Charlesworth at FemBio
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. 3.0 3.1 'Charlesworth, Maria Louisa', in Louise Shattock, The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers, p. 99
  4. Boase 1887, p. 115.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.


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