Theresa Cornwallis West Explained

Theresa Cornwallis West (née Whitby; 1806–1886) (Mrs F. West) was a British writer. She is most noted for her A Summer Visit to Ireland in 1846 and wrote stories for children, young adults and even a novel for adults (The Doom of Doolandour). Her travelogue, written as a member of the English upper class visiting Ireland as a tourist, in the early stages of the Famine has proven a valuable source of both information and views.

She was born at Newlands Manor, Hampshire to the Royal Navy Captain John Whitby (flag captain for Admiral Sir William Cornwallis) and Mary Anne Theresa Whitby (1783–1850) (née Symonds, the writer, landowner, artist and reintroducer of sericulture to England). Theresa married, in 1827, Frederick Richard West (1799–1862) of Ruthin Castle and unlike his first wife bore children and went on to outlive him.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. https://ttce.nuigalway.ie/irelandillustrated/?ttce_function=5&object_type=person&id=ii_person_1371032909 NUI Ireland Illustrated, 1680–1860, National University of Ireland, Galway. Which cites: Troy J Bassett, ‘Theresa Cornwallis John West’, At the Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837–1901, http://www.victorianresearch.org/atcl/show_author.php?aid=753, accessed 8 May 2013
  2. The Athenaeum, 1847, 22 May, page 548.
  3. Web site: Collections - National Maritime Museum. collections.rmg.co.uk.
  4. Hooper, Glenn (2001) The Tourist's Gaze: Travellers to Ireland, 1800–2000, Cork University Press (pp.76–78)
  5. Williams, William H. A., 2011, Creating Irish Tourism: The First Century, 1750–1850, Anthem Press