From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Mary Howitt
English poet, author and editor (1799–1888)
English poet, author and editor (1799–1888)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Mary Howitt |
| image | Picture of Mary Howitt.jpg |
| birth_name | Mary Botham |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Coleford, Gloucestershire, England |
| death_date | |
| death_place | Rome, Kingdom of Italy |
| occupation | Writer |
| spouse | |
| parents | |
| children | 4, including Anna and Alfred |
| known_for | Translator of Hans Christian Andersen's works |
Mary Howitt (12 March 1799 – 30 January 1888) was an English writer, editor, translator and a pioneer of the women's rights movement in the UK. She is most known as the author of the famous poem The Spider and the Fly. She translated several works by Hans Christian Andersen and Frederika Bremer. Some of her works were written in conjunction with her husband, William Howitt. Many, in verse and prose, were intended for young people.
Background and early life
Mary Botham, daughter of Samuel Botham and Ann, was born at Coleford, Gloucestershire, where her parents lived temporarily, while her father, a prosperous Quaker surveyor and former farmer of Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, looked after some mining property. In 1796, aged 38, Samuel had married 32-year-old Ann, daughter of a Shrewsbury ribbon-weaver. They had four children: Anna, Mary, Emma and Charles. Their Queen Anne house is now called Howitt Place. Mary Botham was taught at home, read widely and began writing verse at a very early age.
Marriage and writing

On 16 April 1821 she married William Howitt and began a career of joint authorship with him. Her life was bound up with that of her husband; she was separated from him only during a period when he journeyed to Australia (1851–1854).
The Howitts lived initially in Heanor in Derbyshire, where William was a pharmacist. Not until 1823, when they were living in Nottingham, did William decide to give up his business with his brother Richard and concentrate with Mary on writing. Their literary productions at first consisted mainly of poetry and other contributions to annuals and periodicals. A selection appeared in 1827 as The Desolation of Eyam and other Poems.
The couple mixed with many literary figures, including Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. On moving to Esher in 1837, Howitt began writing a long series of well-known tales for children, with signal success. In 1837 they toured Northern England and stayed with William and Dorothy Wordsworth. Their work was generally well regarded: in 1839 Queen Victoria gave George Byng a copy of Mary's Hymns and Fireside Verses.
William and Mary moved to London in 1843, and after a second move in 1844, counted Tennyson amongst their neighbours. Her Popular History of the United States, published in the United Kingdom in 1859 and the United States in 1860, was "quickly forgotten" in its time but has been praised in the 21st century as a "well-crafted work" that "surpassed all previous histories in its fluid literary style." Uniquely, she paid full attention to slavery, including its role in the north, and made "unprecedented criticisms" of slave codes in New York and South Carolina, compared the "so-called 1741 New York slave revolt" to the Salem witch trials, condemned the American Colonization Society, and pointed out the hypocrisy underlying the American Revolution, in which colonists contended for "their own liberty" while "depriving other people of theirs."
In 1853 they moved to West Hill in Highgate close to Hillside, the home of their friends, the physician and sanitary reformer Thomas Southwood Smith and his partner, the artist Margaret and her sister Mary Gillies. Mary Howitt had some years earlier arranged that the children's writer Hans Christian Andersen would visit Hillside to see the haymaking during his trip to England in 1847. After 1856 Mary, besides anonymous contributions to periodical literature of the day, edited with the assistance of her daughter A Treasury of Stories for the Young, in three volumes.
Women's rights activism
Mary Howitt strongly supported the advancement of women's rights as a professional writer, an editor, translator, mother and campaigner. Her periodical Howitt's Journal (1847–1848), co-edited with her husband, contained a progressive political agenda that allowed women to engage in debates on social and political issues. She translated the works of the Swedish novelist Fredrika Bremer who also championed women's rights. As a mother she gave her two daughters, Anna Mary Howitt and Margaret Howitt, every opportunity to develop their professional careers. In a letter addressed to her sister Anna she insisted that 'Girls must be made independent.' Through her eldest daughter Anna Mary and her good friend Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, author of the pamphlet A Brief Summary of the Laws of England Concerning Women (1854), she became involved as secretary of the Married Women's Property Committee (MWPC). This committee included other eminent and established professional women writers and Leigh Smith's friends such as Anna Mary, Bessie Rayner Parkes and Eliza Bridell Fox. Leigh Smith drafted a petition, which was circulated nationally, with a request for signatures to support a Married Women's Property Bill. Of the 26.000 signatures which were gathered, Mary Howitt personally collected hundreds of signatures. At the head of the petition some respectable married women were placed such as Mary Howitt, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Elizabeth Gaskell.
Her works

Among those written independently of her husband were:
- Sketches of Natural History (1834)
- Wood Leighton, or a Year in the Country (1836)
- Birds and Flowers and other Country Things (1838)
- Hymns and Fireside Verses (1839)
- Hope on, Hope ever, a Tale (1840)
- Strive and Thrive (1840)
- Sowing and Reaping, or What will come of it (1841)
- Work and Wages, or Life in Service (1842)
- Which is the Wiser? or People Abroad (1842)
- Little Coin, Much Care (1842)
- No Sense like Common Sense (1843)
- Love and Money (1843)
- My Uncle the Clockmaker (1844)
- The Two Apprentices (1844)
- My own Story, or the Autobiography of a Child (1845)
- Fireside Verses (1845)
- Ballads and other Poems (1847)
- The Children's Year (1847)
- The Childhood of Mary Leeson (1848)
- Our Cousins in Ohio (1849)
- The Heir of Wast-Wayland (1851)
- The Dial of Love (1853)
- Birds and Flowers and other Country Things (1855)
- The Picture Book for the Young (1855)
- M. Howitt's Illustrated Library for the Young (1856; two series)
- Lillieslea, or Lost and Found (1861)
- Little Arthur's Letters to his Sister Mary (1861)
- The Poet's Children (1863)
- The Story of Little Cristal (1863)
- Mr. Rudd's Grandchildren (1864)
- Tales in Prose for Young People (1864)
- M. Howitt's Sketches of Natural History (1864)
- Tales in Verse for Young People (1865)
- Our Four-footed Friends (1867)
- John Oriel's Start in Life (1868)
- Pictures from Nature (1869)
- Vignettes of American History (1869)
- A Pleasant Life (1871)
- Birds and their Nests (1872)
- Natural History Stories (1875)
- Tales for all Seasons (1881)
- Tales of English Life, including Middleton and the Middletons (1881)
The Spider and the Fly
Main article: The Spider and the Fly (poem)
The poem was originally published in 1829. When Lewis Carroll was readying Alice's Adventures Under Ground for publication, he replaced a parody he had made of a negro minstrel song with the "Lobster Quadrille", a parody of Mary's poem.
The poem became a Caldecott Honor Book in October 2003.
References
References
- [[s:Howitt, Mary (DNB00). Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, Volume 28, Mary Howitt]]
- Walker, Mary Howitt. (1972). "Godfrey Howitt (1800–1873)".
- [http://www.maryhowitt.co.uk/profile.htm Mary Howitt site] {{Webarchive. link. (5 October 2007 Accessed 3 October 2007.)
- While William was in Australia, Mary was responsible for getting his collection ''Stories from English and Foreign Life,'' a translation Ennemoser's ''History of Magic,'' and the ''Australian Boy's Book,'' through the press. During this time she also compiled a history of the United States and edited and wrote various juvenile works.Portraits of Men of Eminence in Literature, Science, and Art, with Biographical Memoirs, by Ernest Edwards, B.A. ; Ed. by Lovell Reeve, Lovell Reeve & Co., 1863
- Yacovone, Donald. (2022). "Teaching White Supremacy: America's Democratic Ordeal and the Forging of Our National Identity". Pantheon Books.
- (2009). "Southwood Smith: his extraordinary life and family". Camden History Review.
- (2009). "From Southwood Smith to Octavia Hill: a remarkable family's Camden years". Camden History Review.
- Lee, Amice. (1955). "The life of William and Mary Howitt". Oxford University Press.
- Lee, Amice. (1955). "The life of William and Mary Howitt". Oxford University Press.
- In June 1852, the three male Howitts, accompanied by [[Edward La Trobe Bateman]], sailed there, hoping to make a fortune. Meanwhile, Mary and her two daughters moved into The Hermitage, Bateman's cottage in [[Highgate]], which had previously been occupied by [[Dante Gabriel Rossetti]].[http://www.schulers.com/books/ge/l/Little_Memoirs_of_the_Nineteenth_Century/Little_Memoirs_of_the_Nineteenth_Century50.htm Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century]{{dead link. (June 2017)
- Anna Mary Howitt's ODNB entry: [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/63040 Retrieved 9 July 2011]. Subscription required.
- William Howitt in the [[Dictionary of National Biography]]
- [http://search.abaa.org/dbp2/book343934829.html A book for sale for $1,750]{{dead link. (June 2017)
- (1847). "The Children's Year". Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
- Martin Gardner, ''The Annotated Alice'', 1998.
- [http://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/alice7a.html#5 Lewis Carroll's parody of Mary's poem] accessed 3 October 2007
- [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9806E3D91239F93BA15752C0A9659C8B63 Children's Book awards announced. New York Times 6 October 2007] accessed 8 October 2007
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Mary Howitt — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report