Elizabeth Heyrick

-
Standard Name: Heyrick, Elizabeth
Birth Name: Elizabeth Coltman
Married Name: Elizabeth Heyrick
Though, as a woman, she worked behind the scenes (not in parliament but through print and private direct action) EH of Leicester was a major, under-recognised figure in the campaign for the abolition of the slave trade. Her pamphlet publications address war, cruelty to animals, workers' wages, prison reform, and other social and political topics as well as abolition. Her political thinking on many points startlingly anticipates later socialist positions. She also published lessons for children and a conduct book. The first of these is the genre in which, in the early nineteenth century, her writing career began. Though her sister knew of only sixteen of her pamphlets, the count has since risen steeply. But their unavailability in major reference libraries has hampered recognition of her.
Corfield, Kenneth. “Elizabeth Heyrick: Radical Quaker”. Religion in the Lives of English Women, 1760-1930, edited by Gail Malmgreen, Indiana University Press, pp. 41-67.
53

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Wealth and Poverty Susanna Watts
An application to the Royal Literary Fund was secretly made on SW 's behalf by a relation of Elizabeth Heyrick (perhaps her mother) and the publisher Richard Phillips ; they got her a grant of...
politics Susanna Watts
As a result of the boycott launched by SW and Elizabeth Heyrick the previous year (targeted at shops as well as consumers), almost a quarter of the population of Leicester had given up sugar.
Aucott, Shirley. Susanna Watts (1768 to 1842): author of Leicester’s first guide, abolitionist and bluestocking. Shirley Aucott.
25
Friends, Associates Susanna Watts
In her own more local circle, however, SW was relaxed and good company. She belonged to a Book Society . She was a close friend of the Hutton and the Coltman families and especially, in...
Leisure and Society Susanna Watts
SW lived an independent social life which combined the old-fashioned with the modern. She was a snuff-taker.
Beale, Catherine Hutton, editor. Catherine Hutton and Her Friends. Cornish Brothers.
158-9
In 1800 she and the Coltman sisters, Elizabeth and Mary Ann , belonged to a self-consciously bluestocking...

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.