Henrietta Batson
Henrietta Batson | |
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File:Henrietta Batson.png | |
Born | Henrietta Mary Blackman 1859 Hamilton, Canada West |
Died | 1943 (aged 83–84) |
Nationality | English |
Other names |
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Occupation | Writer |
Henrietta Mary Batson née Blackman (1859–1943) was an English writer whose interest in the countryside and rural people was an important theme in her novels and much of her non-fiction. She often published as Mrs. Stephen Batson, or sometimes as H.M. Batson.
Life
Born in Hamilton, Canada West to the Rev. Thomas John Mark Willoughby Blackman and Ann Blackman née Gunn in 1859, Batson was living in England by 1871.[1] She stayed there for the rest of her life, and her writing is rooted in English settings and issues. She married in 1879 at Monewden where her father was curate-in-charge, and where she had been an instructor in the night school and the choir.[2] Her husband was the Rev. Alfred Stephen Batson, rector of Welford in Berkshire. Their daughter Mary Stephanie was born the year after their wedding but died when a few weeks old.[3] They lived in the rectory for more than a decade but were then able to move to a smaller, more suitable house. Batson was interested in gardening, folk customs, local history, genealogy and religious topics. She published non-fiction works on most of these subjects and also made scrapbooks, wrote diaries and created a multi-volume manuscript account of family history, which she gave to the London Society of Genealogists.[4] Batson's husband died in 1908. Her last published work came out in 1910, though she went on compiling family genealogy for several years after that. In the 1911 census she described herself as a writer. At this time her niece Margery May Hodgson was part of the household,[5] and they were also living together in 1939.[6] When Henrietta Batson died at Swyre in Dorset in 1943, probate was granted to Hodgson.[7]
Selected works
Fiction
- Dark: a Tale of the Down Country, London: Smith, Elder, 1892
- Such a Lord is Love: A woman's heart tragedy, London, A.D. Innes & Co., 1893
- Adam the Gardener, London : Hurst and Blackett, 1894
- The Earth Children, London : Hutchinson & Co., 1897
- A Splendid Heritage, London, Stanley, Paul and Co.1910
Non-fiction
- Hodge at home, in the Nineteenth Century magazine, vol. 31, 1892
- Terrier and inventory of church possessions in the parish of Welford, Berks., Newbury, 1892
- The rule of the laywoman, in the Nineteenth Century magazine, vol. 39, Jan. 1896
- Town and country labourers: (answers to "The cry of the villages" by A. Jessopp), with P. Wyndham, in the Nineteenth Century magazine, vol. 46, 1899.
- The Ruba'iyat of Omar Khayyam , translated by Edward Fitzgerald; with a commentary by H.M. Batson and a biographical introduction by E.D. Ross, London : Methuen and co. 1900
- A concise handbook of garden flowers, London: Methuen 1903 [8]
- A book of the country and the garden, London: Methuen 1903
- The summer garden of pleasure, London: Methuen 1908
Other
- A history of the Blackman and allied families in Sussex, England, by Henrietta Blackman Batson (Mrs. Alfred Stephen Batson); with addenda, edited, revised, with new material by Marion Wincote Elliott, Los Altos, Calif. 1994
- Index of Mrs Batson's scrapbooks, compiled by Alan W. Garvey, Newbury: Wickham cum Welford History Association c2003
References
- ↑ UK 1871 census
- ↑ Monewden: Wedding Festivities, Ipswich Journal, 30 September 1879
- ↑ Bury and Norwich Post, 12 Oct 1889
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ 1911 UK census
- ↑ 1939 Register of the UK
- ↑ Find a Will
- ↑ Henrietta M. Batson A Concise Handbook of Garden Flowers (1903) at Google Books
- 1859 births
- 1943 deaths
- 19th-century English writers
- 19th-century English women writers
- 20th-century English writers
- 20th-century English women writers
- Pseudonymous women writers
- Writers from Hamilton, Ontario
- 19th-century pseudonymous writers
- 20th-century pseudonymous writers
- Canadian emigrants to the United Kingdom