Margaret Catchpole

English chronicler and deportee to Australia (1762–1819) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margaret Catchpole (14 March 1762 – 13 May 1819) was an English servant girl, chronicler, and deportee to Australia. Born in Suffolk, she worked as a servant in various houses before being convicted of stealing a horse and escaping from Ipswich Gaol. Following her capture, she was transported to the Australian penal colony of New South Wales, where she remained for the rest of her life. Her entry in the Australian Dictionary of Biography describes her as "one of the few true convict chroniclers with an excellent memory and a gift for recording events".

Born(1762-03-14)14 March 1762
Nacton, Suffolk, England
Died13 May 1819(1819-05-13) (aged 57)
OccupationsServant, nurse, cook, midwife
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Margaret Catchpole
A portrait of Catchpole dating from the 1840s, painted from memory by Richard Cobbold
Born(1762-03-14)14 March 1762
Nacton, Suffolk, England
Died13 May 1819(1819-05-13) (aged 57)
OccupationsServant, nurse, cook, midwife
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Early life

Catchpole was reputedly born at Nacton, Suffolk, the daughter of Elizabeth Catchpole[1] and according to one source of Jonathan Catchpole, head ploughman.[2]

Catchpole had little education and worked as a servant for different families until being employed in May 1793 as under-nurse and under-cook by the writer Elizabeth Cobbold at her house on St Margarets Green in Ipswich.[3] Cobbold's husband was a brewer and member of the prosperous Ipswich Cobbold family. Catchpole was close to the family and was responsible for saving the lives of children in her care three times. She also learned to read and write while employed by the Cobbolds.[1]

Papers

Archival materials relating to Catchpole and her relationship with the Cobbolds are held by the Suffolk Archives, the Ipswich Museum, the National Library of Australia, and the Mitchell Library in New South Wales. Some of her surviving letters are roughly transcribed on the Mitchell Library website and reproduced in Laurie Chater Forth's Margaret Catchpole: Her Life and Her Letters (Richmond, 2012). They are discussed, with excerpts, by Marthe Jocelyn in her Scribbling Women: True Tales from Astonishing Lives (Toronto, 2011).

Catchpole's letters describe Hawkesbury River floods, frontier conflict with Indigenous Australians, the countryside and its wildlife, economic developments such as the use of convict miners at Coal River (Newcastle), and the savagery of colonial manners and customs — "by her writings [she] added greatly to Australia's early history".[1]

In culture

The History of Margaret Catchpole, a Suffolk Girl

Rev. Richard Cobbold (son of her former employers) made Catchpole the subject of a novel, The History of Margaret Catchpole, a Suffolk Girl (London, 1845), which has often been reprinted. While Cobbold says in the preface that "the public may depend upon the truth of the main features of this narrative", he takes some liberties and also gets some things wrong, for example:

  • Education: Cobbold's heroine speaks and writes as a cultivated woman, when her letters (see above) show that her education was limited.
  • Marriage: He believed Catchpole married in 1812 and had children — this appears to have been a genuine conviction rather than poetic licence; however, there is no record of a marriage, she invariably describes herself as being on her own, and she is unlikely to have started a family at the age of fifty.[2]
  • Death: Cobbold maintains that Catchpole lived until 1841; however, the register of burials at Richmond leaves no doubt that she died in 1819: "Margaret Catchpole, aged 57 years, came prisoner in the Nile, in the year 1801. Died May 13; was buried May 14, 1819. — Henry Fulton".[2]

Other appearances

Later works, many of which rely to varying degrees on Cobbold's novel, include:

  • 1854: Margaret Catchpole, the Female Horse Stealer!, a popular drama produced in London around 1854.[4]
  • 1887: An English Lass, an Australian play by Alfred Dampier and C.H. Krieger, with Lily Dampier as Catchpole in the original production.
  • 1911: The Romantic Story of Margaret Catchpole, an Australian silent film directed by Raymond Longford and starring Lottie Lyell in the title role. Only part of the movie survives today.
  • 1945: Margaret Catchpole, a radio play by Rex Rienits produced twice by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation: in 1945 with Bebe Scott as the lead and in 1958 starring Alda Ferris.
  • 1949: Margaret Catchpole, the Girl from Wolfkettel, a novel by George Goldsmith Carter. Wolfkettel is, or was, a Saxon name for the area around Nacton.[5]
  • 1966: The Extraordinary Margaret Catchpole, a novel for children by Ruth Manning-Sanders that concentrates on her life before she was deported.
  • 1972: The Smuggler's Wench, a bodice-ripper by Monica Mugan adapted from the Cobbold novel.
  • 1974: Margaret Catchpole, a novel for children by Australian author Nance Donkin with illustrations by Edwina Bell, depicting Catchpole as a pioneering convict woman.
  • 1979: Margaret Catchpole: Two Worlds Apart, a chamber opera by the English composer Stephen Dodgson with a libretto by Suffolk-based writer Ronald Fletcher, recorded by Naxos in 2019.[6]
  • 2007: Scapegallows, a novel by Carol Birch based on Catchpole's experience.[7]
  • 2019: "Margaret Catchpole", a song by East Suffolk folk group Honey and the Bear on their album Made in the Aker.

As eponym

The Margaret Catchpole Public House, Cliff Lane, Ipswich

See also

References

Further reading

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