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Caroline Chisholm

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Caroline Chisholm.
An engraving of Caroline Chisholm
from Harper's Monthly in 1852.
BornMay 30, 1808
DiedMarch 25, 1877

Caroline Chisholm (30 May 1808[1] [2] - March 25, 1877) was a progressive 19th-century English humanitarian known mostly for her involvement with female immigrant welfare in Australia. She is commemorated in the Calendar of saints of the Church of England. There are proposals for the Catholic Church to also recognise her as a saint.[3]. booga

Early life

Born Caroline Jones in the English county of Northamptonshire in 1808, Caroline's father was a landowner and pig farmer. She was the youngest of a large family and was raised by a governess, excelling in mathematics and French. At the age of 22, she married Captain Archibald Chisholm, of the East India Company, thirteen years her senior. Like her, Archibald came from a relatively privileged background, descended from Scottish land-owning highlanders whose fortune had dwindled over the years. Unusual among many of her contemporaries, Caroline agreed to marry Archibald on condition that he treat her as an equal and support her in her philanthropic activities. She did, however, convert from Protestantism to her husband's religion, Roman Catholicism.

BIG ONER WAS NOT HERE

Madras, India

In 1832, Captain Chisholm was stationed in Madras, India. As an officer's wife, Chisholm enjoyed a lifestyle of comfort and luxury, which only served to highlight the stark privation and squalor she observed on the streets of Madras. The dire poverty of children begging for food and sleeping in doorways particularly affected her.

When Chisholm discovered that some of the destitute street urchins she saw regularly were actually the children of enlisted British soldiers, she decided to take action, establishing the Female School of Industry for the Daughters of European Soldiers. By removing these children from the streets and educating them, Chisholm hoped to eventually secure paid employment and better opportunities for them.

Sydney, New South Wales

In 1838, Chisholm and her family moved to Sydney in the colony of New South Wales (now part of Australia) as a result of her husband's sick leave. She met immigrant ships and, in particular, assisted young women who arrived in the colony alone.

Chisholm approached the Governor, Sir George Gipps, with a plan for a house for immigrant women. Her first approach was turned down, but she went back twice to argue her case. Eventually Governor Gipps presented her with part of an empty immigration barracks.

When Chisholm first visited the immigration barracks, they were terribly filthy, plagued with rats and vermin. She worked hard to clean the area and, when the work was finished, a large number of women and girls flooded in to escape from life on the streets. Chisholm taught the women basics in cooking, cleaning, elocution, arithmetic and more. Once the girls were trained, the next part of Chisholm's mission started. Now that they were properly qualified for employment, the girls had to find a place to work. Caroline saw potential in the bush farms of the colony and organised drays to deliver the girls to the farms to become paid laborers.

Death

Chisholm continued to help the women of the colony for many years. After completing her work, she and Archibald returned to England in 1848, where she worked with the British government to improve the conditions on ships destined for New South Wales. Caroline Chisholm helped at least 11,000 immigrants into the Australian colonies. She is buried in Billing Road Cemetery, Northampton, alongside her husband. The inscription reads "Caroline Chisholm, the Emigrant's Friend".

Attributions

The following have all been named after Caroline Chisholm:

Other

  • Caroline Chisholm was the first woman other than a monarch whose likeness appeared on an Australian currency note, when she was featured on the $5 note issued on 29 May 1967.
  • Caroline Chisholm appeared on a five cent Australian postage stamp issued in 1968.[10]
  • The character of Mrs Jellyby in Dickens' novel Bleak House is said to be based on her. [11]

References

  1. ^ mrschisholm.com Website didicated to Chisholm
  2. ^ BBC News item
  3. ^ [1] The Age: Chisholm's supporters push for sainthood October 24, 2007 Retrieved on 2008-05-28
  4. ^ "Canberra's Suburbs - How many gazetted Canberra suburbs are named after women?". Retrieved 2007-05-06.
  5. ^ Chisholm electoral division in Melbourne
  6. ^ "Caroline Chisholm 1808 - 1877", BBC, January 2004
  7. ^ Chisholm College - La Trobe University
  8. ^ http://www.chisholm.vic.edu.au
  9. ^ http://www.carolinechisholm.org.au
  10. ^ Australian Stamp Bulletin No 277, Oct-Dec 2004, p. 21
  11. ^ "Caroline Chisholm - The Emigrants' Friend", BBC, 2 December 2005

Further reading

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography entry
  • De Vries, Susanna. Strength of spirit: pioneering women of achievement from First Fleet to Federation, Millennium Books, 1995. ISBN 0-7022-1346-2
  • Lake, M./ McGrath, A. et al. (1994), "Creating a Nation", Viking: Ringwood
  • Northamptonshire people: Caroline Chisholm from the BBC website
  • Caroline Chisholm: Friend or Foe?, a subsection from the Gold! website on Australia's 19th century gold rushes
  • Hoban, Mary. Fifty One Pieces Of Wedding Cake. A Biography Of Caroline Chisholm. Lowden, Kilmore Victoria, 1973
  • mrschisholm.com A new Australian site dealing with many aspects of Caroline Chisholm's life and work and with aims to assist in the Catholic canonisation of Mrs Chisholm