Margaret Catchpole

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MC was a late eighteenth-century labouring-class woman whose extraordinary experience as a transported felon propelled her (through the influence of Elizabeth Cobbold , her employer and an active woman writer) to express herself in letters, of which eleven are extant. A copy of her confession also survives. These writings, as well as her life-story, were thoroughly appropriated by a nineteenth-century novelistic version. Even recent and sophisticated commentators have found it hard to separate her voice from still-continuing ventriloquism.

Milestones

14 March 1762

MC was born, probably at Hoo in Suffolk.
Barber, Richard, and Richard Cobbold. “The Real Margaret Catchpole”. The History of Margaret Catchpole, a Suffolk Girl, Boydell Press, p. x - xviii.
xi

6 July 1797

According to Richard Cobbold's semi-historical novel (apparently accurate in this instance), MC wrote her first letter to her former employer, Elizabeth Cobbold , from jail.
Cobbold, Richard et al. The History of Margaret Catchpole, a Suffolk Girl. Boydell Press.
239-40
Heney, Helen, editor. Dear Fanny, Women’s Letters to and from New South Wales, 1788-1857. Australian National University Press.
14

21 January 1802

A month after landing in Australia, MC wrote her first letter from Sydney to Elizabeth Cobbold .
Heney, Helen, editor. Dear Fanny, Women’s Letters to and from New South Wales, 1788-1857. Australian National University Press.
23

13 May 1819

MC died from influenza at Richmond in New South Wales.
Donkin, Nance, and Edwina Bell. Margaret Catchpole. Collins.
63

Biography

Birth and Background

14 March 1762

MC was born, probably at Hoo in Suffolk.
Barber, Richard, and Richard Cobbold. “The Real Margaret Catchpole”. The History of Margaret Catchpole, a Suffolk Girl, Boydell Press, p. x - xviii.
xi