Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelFile
Reference Number MS OGDEN/101
TitleMartineau Letters
Date1832-1837
DescriptionEleven letters of Harriet Martineau, 1832-1837, and one from her brother Robert, 1835, to William Tait, inserted in her 'Autobiography' (published in three volumes, Smith Elder, London, 1877).
Extent12 letters
AdminHistoryHarriet Martineau: born in Norwich of a Unitarian Huguenot family, 1802; educated at home and at a school in Norwich, 1813-1815; lived in Bristol; the doctrine of "philosophical necessity" modified her religious beliefs; sent an article to the Unitarian 'Monthly Repository', 1821; wrote on religious subjects; her family suffered financial difficulties; a supposed engagement proved abortive; published short works; began a literary connection with William Johnson Fox, editor of the 'Monthly Repository', for which she wrote reviews; wrote for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge; family difficulties forced her to make a living partly by needlework; awarded prizes for essays by the Central Unitarian Association; visited Dublin, and conceived a series illustrating political economy, 1831; bringing out a story a month she produced 25 numbers, 1832-1834; it proved successful; wrote four "poor-law tales" for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge; added five supplementary tales, 'Illustrations of Taxation', 1834; visited America, 1834; already opposed to slavery, she returned a determined abolitionist, 1836; travelled abroad, 1839; ill health caused her to return; her belief in mesmerism brought charges of credulity; built a house in Westmoreland, 1845-1846; visited Egypt and Palestine, 1846-1847; her anti-theological views were controversial; diagnosed with fatal heart disease, she produced her autobiography, 1855; she lived on, but her health declined; keenly interested in the American war and in the agitation against the Contagious Diseases Acts; died, 1876. Publications: numerous books and articles in periodicals on religious and philosophical subjects, travel, political economy, and other contemporary issues. Her 'Autobiography', which included memorials by Maria Weston Chapman (vol iii), was published in 1877.

William Tait: born in Edinburgh, 1793; attended Edinburgh University briefly; articled to a writer to the signet, but abandoned law and with his brother opened a bookseller's shop in Edinburgh; soon began publishing, including works by Carlyle and Bentham; produced the monthly 'Tait's Edinburgh Magazine', on literary and political subjects, of a radical tone, 1832-1864; the magazine was a success; his contributors included Harriet Martineau and other prominent literary and political figures sympathetic to the opinions of the magazine; personally interested in literature and politics and a prominent figure in Edinburgh life; elected to the city's first reformed town council, 1833; gaoled for four days for refusing to pay church rates, 1833; his shop was a meeting place for many Edinburgh notables; retired from business, 1848; bought the estate of Prior Bank, near Melrose; died there, 1864.
CustodialHistoryPart of the library of Charles Kay Ogden (1889-1957), linguistic psychologist, founder of the Orthological Institute and originator of the language system Basic English, whose interests in language systems are reflected in the subject matter of his collection, which comprised individual manuscripts and manuscript collections dating from the 14th to the 20th century.
AcquisitionPart of the C K Ogden Library acquired by UCL in 1953.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsThe papers are available subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Undertaking.
Related MaterialUniversity College London Special Collections also holds 13 letters from Harriet Martineau to Lord Brougham, 1832-1836, 1858, and undated, a copy letter to T Coates, 1832, a copy letter to the committee of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, 1833, and a copy letter to Miss Carpenter, 1866 (Ref: BROUGHAM HB); 24 letters to the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, 1831-1834 (Ref: SDUK); three letters to Sir Edwin Chadwick [late 1830s-early 1840s] and a letter to her from Chadwick, 1843 (Ref: CHADWICK 1362, 2181/1); 'England and her soldiers', 1859, in her own hand (Ref: MS OGDEN 79); an undated letter to Mrs Joseph Parkes (Ref: PARKES 33).

Correspondence and papers of Harriet Martineau are also held at the British Library, Manuscript Collections; Oxford University, Bodleian Library, Special Collections and Western Manuscripts; Oxford University, Harris Manchester College Library; Birmingham University Information Services, Special Collections Department; London Guildhall University, The Women's Library; Cumbria Record Office, Carlisle Headquarters; Cumbria Record Office, Kendal; Dorset Record Office; Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies; Liverpool Record Office and Local History Service; Wordsworth Library, Ambleside; Armitt Library and Museum, Ambleside; Lambton Park, Chester-le-street; National Library of Scotland, Manuscripts Division; Trinity College Dublin; and, in the USA, Boston Public Library; Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library; Harvard University, Houghton Library; Huntington Library, San Marino, California. For further details see the National Register of Archives and 'Location register of English literary manuscripts and letters: eighteenth and nineteenth centuries' (1995).
FindingAidsHandlist at University College London Special Collections.
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