A. Flowerdew Explained

A. Flowerdew
Birth Name:Alice (unknown surname)
Birth Date:1759
Birth Place:Bury St. Edmunds, England
Death Date:23 September 1830
Death Place:Whitton, Suffolk, England
Resting Place:churchyard, Church of St Mary and St Botolph, Whitton
Occupation:teacher, religious poet, hymnwriter
Language:English
Nationality:British
Notableworks:"Fountain of Mercy! God of Love!"
Spouse:Daniel Flowerdew (d. 1801)

A. Flowerdew (1759 – 23 September 1830) was an English teacher, religious poet and hymnist. Her main work was Poems on Moral and Religious Subjects (1867). She died in 1830.

Early life

Alice (sometimes mistakenly referred to as "Anne") Flowerdew was born in 1759, in Bury St. Edmunds, England. Her maiden name is not known. She was erroneously referred to as "Anne" by Sir Roundell Palmer and other authorities, an error that a living descendant corrected.

Career

She was the second wife of Daniel Flowerdew, who for a few years held a government customs appointment in Jamaica. After he had resigned that position in slave-owning Jamaica and requested other employment, the couple returned to England with relief at the end of the 19th century.[1]

After losing her husband in 1801, the widowed Flowerdew kept a ladies' boarding school in Islington, where she wrote most of her poetry. In 1802, her stepson, Charles Frederic Flowerdew, also died. While living in Islington, she attended the ministry of the Rev. Dr John Evans, author of A Sketch of the Several Religious Denominations (1795) and some other works. He was Minister of the General Baptist Church, Worship Street, London, and an Arian. Flowerdew is said to have held the same views. Some time between 1806 and 1811, she moved her school to Bury St Edmunds[1] and became a member of the Bury "Glasshouse" congregation.

Writings

In 1803, Flowerdew published by subscription a volume entitled Poems on Moral and Religious Subjects, which was sold through her friend Henry Delahoy Symonds[2] and through Martha Gurney.[3] Some lines praised Lady Mary Wortley Montagu for her struggle to establish smallpox inoculation, and her subscribers included Edward Jenner, who had devised it. In her preface dated 24 May 1803, she notes that they were "written at different periods of life — some indeed at a very early age, and others under the very severe Pressure of Misfortune, when my pen had frequently given that relief which could not be derived from other employments." A second edition appeared in 1804.

Further poems and a preface on female education were added to a third edition,[1] where there appeared her well-known harvest hymn, "Fountain of mercy, God of love". This is sometimes attributed to John Needham and was probably altered from a hymn by him (1768). It is believed by a relative of Flowerdew to have been written before 1810, and other relatives and friends of the family are agreed in ascribing it to her. By comparing it with Needham's hymns, it will be seen to be superior especially in form. Relatives and friends of the family are agreed in ascribing it to her. She wrote other pieces later, but these were not published in a collected form.

Death

Flowerdew eventually moved to Ipswich. She died in Whitton on 23 September 1830 and was buried in the churchyard there. Her tomb reads: "Sacred to the memory of Mrs. Alice Flowerdew, who died September 23, 1830, aged 71 years." She was survived by a grandson, J. D. McKenzie, of St. Albans.

Selected works

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present, ed. Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 381.
  2. http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nr92035161/ WorldCat Identities. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
  3. Web site: Flowerdew, Alice (1769–1830) . Dissenting Women Writers, 1650-1850 . 28 June 2018.