Into the Unknown

Into the Unknown

by Joy Dunicliff
Into the Unknown

Into the Unknown

by Joy Dunicliff

eBook

$2.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

This new book describes the life of Mary and William Howitt’s eldest surviving son, Alfred, who travelled to Australia with his brother, Charlton, and their father William in 1851. They travelled to Australia to join the gold rush where Alfred remained while Charlton returned to England with his father. Alfred retrieved the bodies of Burke and Wills, following the failed expedition into the red centre from the north coast of Australia. Alfred was a self-taught geologist, a botanist, a very early anthropologist, an official member of an Aborigine tribe, and received an honorary degree from Cambridge University. Charlton, later in his short life, ended up in New Zealand after agreeing to help a family friend sort out some business problems, only to be drawn into an expedition which proved fatal. The young men had benefited from their parents’ interesting life and their support for emigration as there were no jobs for people in England especially for non-conformists who were banned from any professional work. The cost of education and the cost of living were very expensive particularly then in the middle of a recession! The parents of Alfred Howitt were known for their literary work and for their translations. William tranlated from German, and Mary translated from Danish and Swedish. Mary Howitt’s life was quite simply extraordinary: she was the daughter of a strict Quaker family in Uttoxeter, who at the end her life became a Roman Catholic, being welcomed into the faith by the Pope himself at the Vatican; she was a children’s author who was the first to translate the works of Hans Christian Andersen into English; she was a feminist and anti-slavery campaigner with influential friends such as Elizabeth Gaskell and Charles Dickens; she and her husband also associated with the Pre-Raphaelite artistic brotherhood. I was fascinated with Mary from the time I first heard about her from my mother-in-law. It has been an honour to bring her family’s story into the light and was a source of great interest for my husband and me, inspiring us to carry out wider research into local history. It is interesting that one family from the small Staffordshire market town of Uttoxeter in England should have had such a major impact on the development of Australia and New Zealand, so far away.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781909833128
Publisher: Vivlia Limited
Publication date: 01/06/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 405
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

I hated history, or anything to do with it, until I came to my adopted home, the historic market town of Uttoxeter in Staffordshire. Here I found local and social history, and the subject changed my life. One thing led to another, and I am now regarded as a local historian. Much of my research has focused around the life and work of the town’s revered writer and poet, Mary Howitt. She wrote about the town in which she was living during the Napoleonic Wars and explained how her father was responsible for making changes to the town. Her life and work in literature, health, and politics, has now largely been forgotten, even locally, but Mary left her mark on the world, as did her children. This is about her two surviving sons, who certainly left their mark on Australia and on New Zealand. The research into their lives has really fascinated me, especially as I was supposed to go to New Zealand under the £10 passage scheme, after the Second World War. I was accepted, the sailing date arranged, but I am still awaiting that ticket. I have, however, more recently enjoyed visiting that part of the world, trying to understand how Charlton and his brother Alfred might have felt exploring a completely new environment. I have previously published “The Traveller on the Hill-top”, “Mary Howitt the Famous Authoress”, Mary Howitt: Another Lost Victorian Writer”, and “Quaker to Catholic” (renamed “Mary Looks Back”). Much research was undertaken prior to the days of the internet, which allowed me to enjoy travelling around, collecting the material, and meeting many interesting people.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews