Lucy Ann Brooks | |
Birth Name: | Lucy Ann Marsh |
Birth Date: | 31 May 1835 |
Birth Place: | Strood, Kent, England |
Occupation: | temperance advocate |
Relatives: | Anthony Brooks (great-grandson) |
Lucy Ann Brooks (Marsh; 31 May 1835 – 25 March 1926) was an English temperance advocate. She was an officer of the British Women's Temperance Association[1] before becoming a co-founder and president of the Women's Total Abstinence Union (WTAU).[2]
Lucy Ann (sometimes spelled "Anne") Marsh was born at Strood, Kent, May 31, 1835. Her parents were Richard Marsh (1795–1878), of Kingston, Surrey,[3] draper, and Ann Marsh (born Morris, 1793–1891).
She was educated in the Friends’ School at Croydon.
Brooks signed the abstinence pledge at eight years of age, but while still a young girl had followed the advice of her physician and taken medicine compounded with alcohol as was prescribed in those days. It was not until she reached the age of 18 that she determined to assert herself and return to strictly total-abstinence principles in sickness as well as in health.
In 1859, she married Edmund Wright Brooks. For many years, the couple made their home at Grays, Essex.
Together with her husband, Brooks joined the Independent Order of Good Templars early in their married life, and both became actively enlisted in the work of the Order. It was in the lodge meetings that Mrs. Brooks first attempted to read and speak in public. Beginning with fear and trembling, she gradually acquired the ability to address the largest audiences.
In 1893, she was one of the founders of the WTAU and served successively as honorary secretary, president, and member of the executive committee. In the summer of 1897, Mr. and Mrs. Brooks held a garden party at their home "Duvals", Grays, for temperance workers and Friends which included a meeting, under the presidency of the host, at which, as far as possible, a representative from each centre was invited to speak.[4] In 1898, Mrs. Brooks served on the Women Friends' Central Committee on Temperance.[5]
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks, in association with a few Friends, were instrumental in starting a coffee-tavern at Grays, which proved a great boon to the people who needed it most as a welcome substitute for the pub. During the Russian famine of 1891–1892, Mr. Brooks was sent to that country by the Society of Friends to investigate and report on the situation. In subsequent visits, Mrs. Brooks accompanied him, and they extended their travels through Switzerland, Germany, France, Italy, and other countries. Their first-hand observations on the habits of the people, and the relation between poverty and drink in these foreign lands contributed much to the informing character of the addresses delivered by them before various bodies.
On 29 June 1859, she married Edmund Wright Brooks. There were four sons and six daughters, including Herbert Edmund Brooks (1860–1931), Alfred Brooks (1861–1952) and Howard Brooks (1868–1948), who succeeded him in the cement business. According to DQB and Digest Register at The Library of the Society of Friends,the children were:
Of the nine surviving children, one resigned Quaker membership in 1886 and three more in 1915. His daughter Mabel Winifred (b. 1872) remained a Friend and married, in 1897, Henry Jeffrey Simpson (1868–1938) an employee and later partner in the family cement manufacturing company.[6]
Lucy Ann Brooks died in March 1926, leaving effects worth just over £15,000 to her sons Herbert, Alfred and Howard.[7]