Last week the postman brought me a small parcel which had started
its journey in the United States of America some weeks before. It contained a slim book of no more than 92
pages, which on its way from America to Ireland retraced the journey it had
made in the opposite direction over 170 years previously. The book, ‘Recollections
of the Character of Mary Leadbetter with a Brief Memoir of Her Life and
Writings’ was printed in William Street, Dublin in 1829 by Richard Davis
Webb. Mary Leadbetter, the Ballitore
village postmistress, had died three years previously at 68 years of age and
the recollections were written by her cousin, Betty Shackleton. In the preface to the book the authoress
claimed that what she wrote was not ‘for
the public eye, nor are they intended for any but those whose intimacy with
Mary Leadbetter inclines them to believe that the recollection is not
exaggerated. They were written soon
after her death when her virtues were vividly remembered and recorded with no view
to publication, some friends having transcribed the manuscript, a few copies
are now printed to save that trouble in future.’
The recollections which accounted for 63 pages of the book and were
written within weeks of Mary Leadbetter’s death, also included between the
covers, ‘A Memoir’ of 14 pages
written around the same time ‘by a young
friend of hers whom she highly esteemed.’
The slim volume intended for private circulation amongst the small
group of Leadbetter’s friends was printed and published by Richard David Webb,
a member of the Society of Friends who had attended the Ballitore Quaker
School. The school had re-opened in 1806
under the headmastership of James White following a period of internal Quaker
doctrinal dissension which had lead to its closure in 1801. White married Lydia Shackleton, daughter of
Abraham Shackleton, the former headmaster whose father Richard had established
the Ballitore School in 1726. Richard
Davis Webb’s time as a pupil in the school coincided with that of a young
Frenchman, Theodore E. Suliot, who taught French and classics in
Ballitore. Suliot, who was a graduate of
Glasgow University, was slightly older than Webb and a follower of John Wesley.
Mary Leadbetter, Theodore Suliot and Richard Webb had all formed
friendships arising out of their different associations with Ballitore
School. Mary, the daughter of a former
headmaster of the school, Theodore the young teacher and Richard, the onetime
pupil would remain friends and correspond with each other over the years. Leadbetter lived all her life in Ballitore
Village, while Webb, a Dubliner by birth, would return to that city where he
set up his printing works. Suliot would
spend some time in London before returning to Ballitore where his name appeared
as joint headmaster of the Ballitore School in advertisements for 1832.
The book which was returned from America last week is a unique
association copy for it was presented to Theodore Suliot by Richard Webb and is
so inscribed. Suliot was still living in
Ballitore when the presentation copy was given to him. The Leadbetter book represented Webb’s first
venture into the world of publishing and printing. Later in life Webb, a friend of the Liberator
Daniel O’Connell and the Temperance leader Theobald Matthew would be involved
in many Irish Philanthropic societies.
He is best known today for his role in the anti-slavery movement of the
mid-19th century and his part in the Hibernian Temperance Society
which was the predecessor of the Temperance movement later championed by Fr.
Matthew. Involved with Webb in the
anti-slavery campaign was James Haughton, brother of Alfred Haughton, both sons
of Samuel Haughton of Carlow. Alfred, a Quaker,
operated mills in Athy and Ardreigh from the 1850s and he had built Ardreigh
House on the Carlow Road immediately following the end of the Great
Famine. Webb was also actively involved
with Quaker relief measures during the Great Famine and was appointed by the
Central Relief Committee to investigate complaints of abuses in the
distribution of relief by local committees in Connaught.
Webb supported the prominent black anti-slavery activist Frederick
Douglass when he came to Ireland for a lecture tour in 1845. Webb’s printing presses were used to turn out
copies of Douglass’s biography which was something of a bestseller during the
African American’s tour of Ireland. The
refusal of the Quakers to allow Douglass to use the Meeting House in Eustace
Street in Dublin and Webb’s growing disenchantment with the Society lead to Webb’s
resignation from the Society of Friends in 1851. He continued with his printing business until
his death, which occurred while he was visiting America in 1872. He is buried in the Quaker cemetery at Temple
Hill, Blackrock in County Dublin.
Theodore Sulliot is less well known.
He shared the headmastership of Ballitore School with James White until
the school closed in 1836. That same
year he married White’s daughter Hannah and emigrated to Leeds where in 1837 he
was listed as an academic living and working in that city. As with Webb, Elliot was involved in the
anti-slavery movement and by 1850 he was anxious to emigrate to Ohio, America
where a number of like-minded people wanted to form a community there. In a letter written from Philadelphia in April
of that year slavery abolitionist Lucretia Mott mentioned Suliot’s desire for
Webb and his family to join him in travelling to Ohio. Webb remained in Dublin but Sulliot and his
wife Hannah joined a Methodist mission in Ohio where the one-time Ballitore
school teacher became professor of Latin and French literature in Wilberforce
University. The book given to Sulliot by
Richard Webb soon after its publication in 1829 presumably went with him to
America and is now back in Athy, the town which hosted its first Quaker meeting
238 years ago.
Mary Leadbetter, whose death on 27th June 1826 prompted
the ‘Recollections and Memoirs’ was
the daughter of Richard Shackleton, an intimate friend of Edmund Burke from
their young school days in Ballitore. In
1791 Mary married William Leadbetter and three years later published the first
of her many publications. Several of
these books are on exhibition in the Heritage Centre in Athy. Her principal publications included ‘Cottage Dialogues of the Irish Peasantry’,
the first two volumes of which were published in 1811 and 1813, while a third
volume was published after her death by the former Ballitore school pupil
Richard Webb. He was also to publish
Mary Leadbetter’s best known work, the two-volume ‘Annals of Ballitore’ which appeared in 1862. These Annals contain Mary’s contemporary
accounts of daily life in Ballitore where she was the postmistress and covered
the 1798 Rebellion. Her account of the
rebellion in the Ballitore neighbourhood is regarded as the best and most
impartial account of what happened during that time.
The ‘Annals of Ballitore’
which have been out of print for so long are now being reprinted by the County
Library Service in association with Athy Heritage Centre and will be formally
launched in the Town Hall Centre on a date soon to be announced.
Of the three people linked with the ‘Recollections on the Character of Mary Leadbetter’ it is the
former postmistress of Ballitore who is best remembered today. Richard David Webb’s influential involvement over
50 years in many Irish philanthropic movements is largely forgotten, while
little is known of the Frenchman who arrived as a young man in Ballitore
village in the early years of the 19th century. They came together again in the slim volume
which now rests on my bookshelf, not far from the Quaker village where they
first met and spent some years in happy association.
No comments:
Post a Comment