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Catherine Dickens

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Catherine Dickens
Born
Catherine Thomson Hogarth

(1815-05-19)19 May 1815
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died22 November 1879(1879-11-22) (aged 64)
London, England
Resting placeHighgate Cemetery, London, England
Known forWife of English novelist Charles Dickens
Spouse
(m. 1836; sep. 1858)
ChildrenCharles Culliford Boz Dickens
Mary Dickens
Kate Macready Dickens
Walter Landor Dickens
Francis Jeffrey Dickens
Alfred D'Orsay Tennyson Dickens
Sydney Smith Haldimand Dickens
Sir Henry Fielding Dickens
Dora Annie Dickens
Edward Dickens
ParentGeorge Hogarth (father)
RelativesGeorgina Hogarth (sister)

Catherine Thomson "Kate" Dickens (née Hogarth; 19 May 1815 – 22 November 1879) was the Scottish wife of English novelist Charles Dickens, the mother of his ten children, and a writer of domestic management.

Early life

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Catherine Dickens by Samuel Lawrence (1838)[1]

Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1815, Catherine moved to England with her family in 1824. She was the eldest daughter of ten children to George Hogarth and Georgina Thomson.

Her father was a journalist for the Edinburgh Courant, and later became a writer and music critic for the Morning Chronicle, where Dickens was a young journalist, and later the editor of the Evening Chronicle.

Marriage

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Dickens immediately took a liking to the 19-year-old Catherine and invited her to his 23rd birthday party. She was attractive, intelligent, kind and a gifted musician.[2] Catherine and Dickens became engaged in 1835 and he had his likeness painted on ivory by Rose Emma Drummond as an engagement present.[3] They were married on 2 April 1836 in St Luke's Church, Chelsea, going on their honeymoon in Chalk, near Chatham in Kent and setting up a home in Bloomsbury.

She became pregnant almost immediately and the couple went on to have ten children over the next 15 years, and at least two miscarriages.[4] During that period, Charles wrote that even if he were to become rich and famous, he would never be as happy as he was in that small flat with Catherine.

Catherine's sister, Mary Hogarth, entered Dickens's Doughty Street household to offer support to her newly married sister and brother-in-law. It was usual for an unwed sister of a wife to live with and help a newly married couple. Dickens became very attached to Mary, with historians debating the nature of the relationship, and she died in his arms after a brief illness in 1837.[5] She became a character in many of his books, and her death is fictionalised as the death of Little Nell.[6]

Catherine's younger sister, Georgina Hogarth, joined the Dickens family household in 1842 when Dickens and Catherine sailed to the United States, caring for the young family they had left behind. During their trip, Dickens wrote in a letter to a friend that Catherine never felt gloomy or lost courage throughout their long journey by ship, and "adapted to any circumstances without complaint". In 1845, Charles Dickens produced the amateur theatrical Every Man in his Humour for the benefit of Leigh Hunt. In a subsequent performance, Catherine Dickens, who had a minor role, fell through a trap door.[7]

In 1851, as 'Lady Maria Clutterbuck', Catherine published a cookery book, What Shall we Have for Dinner? Satisfactorily Answered by Numerous Bills of Fare for from Two to Eighteen Persons. It contained many suggested menus for meals of varying complexity together with a few recipes. It went through several editions until 1860.[8] Also in 1851, she allegedly had a nervous breakdown after the death of her daughter, Dora Annie Dickens, aged seven months.[9]

Separation

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Catherine Dickens c. 1847 by Daniel Maclise
Daguerreotype, taken in 1852
Family grave of Catherine Dickens in Highgate Cemetery (west side)

Over the subsequent years, Dickens claimed Catherine became an increasingly incompetent mother and housekeeper.[10] He also blamed her for the birth of their ten children, which caused him financial worries. He had hoped to have no more after the birth of their fourth child Walter, and he claimed that her coming from a large family had caused so many children to be born. To ensure no more children could be born, he ordered their bed to be separated and put a bookshelf in between them, then completely moved out of their bedroom and had the connecting door boarded shut.[2] He tried to have her falsely diagnosed as mentally ill in order to commit her to an asylum.[11][12]

In May 1858, Charles and Catherine Dickens separated, and she moved into a property on Gloucester Crescent in Camden Town. They arranged the terms of their separation by deed instead of a court hearing.[13] She had no custody rights to her children under English law, but was promised "free access to all or any of her children at all places" in the deed.[14]

The exact cause of the separation is unknown, although attention at the time and since has focused on rumours of an affair between Dickens and Ellen Ternan and/or Catherine's sister, Georgina Hogarth. A bracelet intended for Ellen Ternan had supposedly been delivered to the Dickens household some months previously, leading to accusation and denial.

Dickens's friend, William Makepeace Thackeray, asserted that Dickens's separation from Catherine was due to a liaison with Ternan, rather than with Georgina Hogarth as had been put to him. This remark coming to Dickens's attention, Dickens was so infuriated that it almost put an end to the Dickens–Thackeray friendship.[15]

Many other friends, relations and society figures commented on the separation, with most supporting Catherine and rallying to her defence. Elizabeth Barrett Browining called Dickens treatment of his wife "criminal" and the peeress and philanthropist Angela Burdett Couts, Dickens old friend, eventually broke off their friendship over the separation.[13] Contemporaries also praised Catherine for her "ladylike" silence and dignity,[13] as she did not speak one harsh word in public about her husband’s treatment.[2]

Georgina, Charles and all of the children except Charles Dickens Jr., remained in their home at Tavistock House, while Catherine and Charles Jr. moved out.[14] Georgina Hogarth ran Dickens's household.[14]

On 12 June 1858, Dickens published an article in his journal, Household Words, denying rumours about the separation while neither articulating them nor clarifying the situation.

Some domestic trouble of mine, of long-standing, on which I will make no further remark than that it claims to be respected, as being of a sacredly private nature, has lately been brought to an arrangement, which involves no anger or ill-will of any kind, and the whole origin, progress, and surrounding circumstances of which have been, throughout, within the knowledge of my children. It is amicably composed, and its details have now to be forgotten by those concerned in it ... By some means, arising out of wickedness, or out of folly, or out of inconceivable wild chance, or out of all three, this trouble has been the occasion of misrepresentations, mostly grossly false, most monstrous, and most cruel – involving, not only me, but innocent persons dear to my heart ... I most solemnly declare, then – and this I do both in my own name and in my wife's name – that all the lately whispered rumours touching the trouble, at which I have glanced, are abominably false. And whosoever repeats one of them after this denial, will lie as wilfully and as foully as it is possible for any false witness to lie, before heaven and earth.

He sent this statement to the newspapers, including The Times, and many reprinted it. He fell out with Bradbury and Evans, his publishers, because they refused to publish his statement in Punch as they thought it unsuitable for a humorous periodical. Another public statement appeared in the New York Tribune, which later found its way into several British newspapers. In this statement, Dickens declared that it had been only Georgina Hogarth who had held the family together for some time:

... I will merely remark of [my wife] that some peculiarity of her character has thrown all the children on someone else. I do not know – I cannot by any stretch of fancy imagine – what would have become of them but for this aunt, who has grown up with them, to whom they are devoted, and who has sacrificed the best part of her youth and life to them. She has remonstrated, reasoned, suffered, and toiled, again and again, to prevent a separation between Mrs. Dickens and me. Mrs. Dickens has often expressed to her sense of affectionate care and devotion in her home – never more strongly than within the last twelve months.[16]

The separation, and Dickens's rewriting of it (and the couple’s marriage), would shape how Catherine would be seen up until her death in 1879, and in the following decades.[17]

Later years

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Dickens and Catherine had little correspondence after their separation, communicating by letter only three times and meeting only once, accidentally, outside a theatre.[14] In 1864, their son Walter Landor Dickens died in Calcutta, India,[18] and Angela Burdett Couts encouraged Dickens to write to Catherine after his death. He would not and wrote back to Couts that: "a page in my life which once had writing on it, has become absolutely blank, and it is not in my power to pretend that it has a solitary word upon it".[19]

Dickens also did not honour the clause in their separation deed about Catherine's access to her children, and their daughter Kate later described how Dickens would "reproach" her for visiting her mother.[14] Dickens arranged for their sons to take up jobs in the British colonies without consulting their mother, and Catherine was deeply upset by their departures from England.[14] Their son Sydney Smith Haldimand Dickens, a sub-lieutenant in the Royal Navy, nevertheless chose to live with his mother during his periods of leave.[13]

Death

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While on her deathbed in 1879, Catherine gave the collection of letters she had received from Dickens to her daughter Kate telling her to "Give these to the British Museum – that the world may know [Charles] loved me once" and correct the historical record.[7] Shirley Brooks reflected in her diary that Catherine "was resolved not to allow... any biographer to allege that she did not make D[ickens] a happy husband".[13]

She died of cancer[2] and was buried in Highgate Cemetery in London with her infant daughter Dora, who had died in 1851, aged seven months. Her grave is far from Dickens' own grave in Westminster Abbey.[2]

In the media

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Catherine Dickens was the subject of the sixty-minute BBC Two documentary Mrs Dickens' Family Christmas, broadcast on 30 December 2011 and performed and presented by Sue Perkins, and which looked at the marriage of Charles Dickens through the eyes of Catherine.[20]

In the 1976 TV series Dickens of London, she was portrayed by Adrienne Burgess.[21]

In the 2013 film The Invisible Woman, she was portrayed by Joanna Scanlan.[22]

In the 2017 film The Man Who Invented Christmas, she was portrayed by Morfydd Clark.[23]

References

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  1. ^ Charles Dickens: An Exhibition to Commemorate the Centenary of His Death. London: Victorian and Albert Museum, 1970. Victorian Web.com
  2. ^ a b c d e Kennedy, Maev (25 August 2024). "'It destroys the image Dickens tried to create': unpublished letters give voice to writer's beleaguered wife". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. Retrieved 8 January 2025.
  3. ^ Harris, Elree I.; Scott, Shirley R. (26 November 2013). A Gallery of Her Own: An Annotated Bibliography of Women in Victorian Painting. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-49441-4.
  4. ^ Hawksley, Lucinda (19 May 2016). "The forgotten wife of Charles Dickens". BBC. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  5. ^ Parker, David (1996). "Dickens and the Death of Mary Hogarth". Dickens Quarterly. 13 (2): 67–75. ISSN 0742-5473. JSTOR 45291584.
  6. ^ Victorianweb.org – Mary Scott Hogarth, 1820–1837: Dickens's Beloved Sister-in-Law and Inspiration
  7. ^ a b Slater, Michael (1983). Dickens and Women. Stanford: Stanford University Press. p. 127, 159. ISBN 0460042483. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  8. ^ Rossi-Wilcox, Susan M. (2005). Dinner for Dickens: The Culinary History of Mrs Charles Dickens' Menu Books : Including a Transcript of What Shall We Have for Dinner? by 'Lady Maria Clutterbuck'. Prospect. ISBN 978-1-903018-38-5.
  9. ^ Rose, Phyllis (1983). Parallel Lives: Five Victorian Marriages. New York: Vintage. p. 157. ISBN 9780307761507.
  10. ^ Waters, Catherine (3 July 1997). Dickens and the Politics of the Family. Cambridge University Press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-0-521-57355-9.
  11. ^ "Letters reveal Charles Dickens tried to place his wife in an asylum". University of York. 20 February 2019. Retrieved 8 January 2025.
  12. ^ Malvern, Jack (21 February 2019). "Dickens's dastardly plan for his wife". The Times.
  13. ^ a b c d e Nayder, Lillian (2002). "The Widowhood of Catherine Dickens". Dickens Studies Annual. 32: 277–298. ISSN 0084-9812. JSTOR 44372060.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Nayder, Lillian (2006). "Catherine Dickens and Her Colonial Sons". Dickens Studies Annual. 37: 81–93. ISSN 0084-9812. JSTOR 44372159.
  15. ^ Nisbet, Ada (1952). Dickens and Ellen Ternan. University of California Press.
  16. ^ Household Words. 12 June 1858.
  17. ^ "Celebrating Catherine Dickens". Charles Dickens Museum. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  18. ^ "Kolkata's link with Charles Dickens". The Hindu. 7 February 2012. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 8 January 2025.
  19. ^ Nayder, Lillian (2002). "The Other Dickens and America: Catherine in 1842". Dickens Quarterly. 19 (3): 141–150. ISSN 0742-5473. JSTOR 45291874.
  20. ^ "BBC Two - Mrs Dickens' Family Christmas". BBC. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  21. ^ Pointer, Michael (1996). Charles Dickens on the Screen: The Film, Television, and Video Adaptations. Scarecrow Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780810829602.
  22. ^ Shoard, Catherine (6 September 2013). "The Invisible Woman – Toronto 2013: first look review". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  23. ^ "Review | 'The Man Who Invented Christmas' looks at the birth of 'A Christmas Carol'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 April 2019.

Bibliography

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