Anna Jameson was a British author known for her travel memoirs which give an account of her amazing journeys and vivid experiences
@Women Rights Activist, Timeline and Facts
Anna Jameson was a British author known for her travel memoirs which give an account of her amazing journeys and vivid experiences
Anna Jameson born at
She died after a brief illness on March 17, 1860 in Ealing, London.
She was born on May 19, 1794 in Dublin, Ireland, to Denis Brownell Murphy, an Irish miniaturist and portrait painter. She was the eldest of the five daughters of her parents.
In 1798, before the rebellion in Ireland, the family immigrated to England leaving behind two daughters, Louisa and Eliza. After settling in 1802 at Newcastle-on-Tyne, her two sisters joined them.
By 1806, her father was enjoying a modest success as a miniaturist and moved his family to London. The family now consisted of five daughters with the birth of two more girls, Camilla and Charlotte.
Anna was an ambitious child and the most talented one of all the sisters. From an early age, she was anxious to assume a part of the responsibility for the family’s welfare. Hence, she was given the responsibility of looking after the proper education of her sisters.
In 1810, she took up her first job, at the age of 16, as a governess to the four small sons of the family of Charles Paulet, 13th Marquess of Winchester. She worked there until 1814.
In 1819, she began an engagement with the Rowles family and became the governess to their daughter, Laura. She also accompanied them to the Continental Europe in 1821, traveling in luxury “à la MilorAnglais” through the Low Countries and into Italy.
In 1822, she returned to England and became the governess to the children of Edward John Littleton who was later conferred the title of 1st Baron Hatherton. She worked here until her marriage to Robert Sympson Jameson in 1825.
Over the next few years, she wrote two books for young children titled ‘Much coin, much care’, a drama, and ‘Little Louisa’, a vocabulary of useful words.
Her first successful book ‘The Diary of an Ennuyée’, a fictitious account of her travels in Italy, was published in 1825. It was a romanticized and fictionalized version of her European trip ending with the death of its heart-broken narrator and heroine.
Some of her published works such as ‘Characteristics of Women’ and ‘Sacred and Legendary Art’ acquired a cult following in England and America. Her travel memoir ‘Winter Studies and Summer Rambles in Canada’ is considered to be a classic book.
She always stressed on the importance of better education for women. She was a determined, and one of the early feminists, who raised her voice about women’s rights and their needs and opportunities in society.