Princess Caraboo
Mary Baker (née Willcocks) (1791 – 24 December 1864) was a noted impostor who went by the name Princess Caraboo. She pretended to be from a far off island kingdom and fooled a British town for some months.[2]
Biography
On 3 April 1817, a cobbler in Almondsbury in Gloucestershire, England, met an apparently disoriented young woman wearing exotic clothes who was speaking an incomprehensible language. The cobbler's wife took this stranger to the Overseer of the Poor, who placed her in the hands of the local county magistrate, Samuel Worrall, who lived in Knole Park on the estate where Tower House is located. Worrall and his American-born wife Elizabeth could not understand her either; what they did determine was that she called herself Caraboo and that she was interested in Chinese imagery. They sent her to the local inn, where she identified a drawing of a pineapple with the word 'ananas', meaning pineapple in many Indo-European languages, and insisted on sleeping on the floor. Samuel Worrall declared she was a beggar and should be taken to Bristol and tried for vagrancy.[3]
During her imprisonment, a Portuguese sailor named Manuel Eynesso (or Enes) said he spoke her language and translated her story. According to Enes, she was Princess Caraboo from the island of Javasu in the Indian Ocean. She had been captured by pirates and after a long voyage she had jumped overboard in the Bristol Channel and swam ashore.[3]
The Worralls brought Caraboo to their home. For ten weeks, this representative of exotic royalty was a favourite of the local dignitaries. She used a bow and arrow, fenced, swam naked and prayed to a god, whom she named Alla-Tallah. She acquired exotic clothing and her portrait was painted and reproduced in local newspapers. Her authenticity was attested to by a Dr Wilkinson, who identified her language using Edmund Fry's Pantographia and stated that marks on the back of her head were the work of oriental surgeons.[4]
Eventually the truth surfaced. A boarding-house keeper, Mrs. Neale, recognised her from the picture in the Bristol Journal and informed her hosts. This would-be princess was in truth a cobbler's daughter, Mary Baker (née Willcocks) from Witheridge, Devon. She had been a servant girl around England but had found no place to stay. She invented her fictitious language from imaginary and gypsy words and created an exotic character and story. The odd marks on her head were scars from a crude cupping operation in a poorhouse hospital in London.[3] The British press had a field day at the expense of the duped rustic middle-class.[3]
Her hosts arranged for her to travel to Philadelphia and she departed 28 June 1817.
On 13 September 1817 a letter was printed in the Bristol Journal, allegedly from Sir Hudson Lowe, the official in charge of the exiled Emperor Napoleon on St. Helena. It claimed that after the Philadelphia-bound ship bearing the beautiful Caraboo had been driven close to the island by a tempest, the intrepid princess impulsively cut herself adrift in a small boat, rowed ashore and so fascinated the emperor that he was applying to the Pope for a dispensation to marry her. That story is unverified.[5]
In the USA, she briefly continued her role, appearing on-stage at the Washington Hall, Philadelphia, as 'Princess Caraboo', with little success.[3] Her last contact with the Worralls was in a letter from New York in November 1817, in which she complained of her notoriety.[3] She appears to have returned to Philadelphia until she left America in 1824, returning to England.[3]
In 1824 she returned to Britain and briefly exhibited herself in New Bond Street, London, as 'Princess Caraboo' but her act was not successful.[3] She may have briefly travelled to France and Spain in her guise, but soon returned to England. In September 1828, she was living as a widow in Bedminster under the name Mary Burgess (in reality the name of a cousin).[3] There she married Richard Baker, and gave birth to a daughter the following year. In 1839, she was selling leeches to the Bristol Infirmary Hospital. She died on 24 December 1864 and was buried in the Hebron Road cemetery in Bristol.[3]
Film
The hoax provided material for a script, filmed in 1994, Princess Caraboo, written by Michael Austin and John Wells, which added some fictional elements to the story.
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Baring-Gould, Sabine (1908). "Caraboo". Devonshire Characters and Strange Events. London: John Lane. pp. 35–47.
- ↑ Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 2004.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 John Wells, 'Baker , Mary [Princess Caraboo] (bap. 1791, d. 1864)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Sept 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/41062, accessed 5 June 2013]
- ↑ The Times. 6 June 1817. p. 4.
- ↑ Sitwell, Edith (1958). English Eccentrics. Penguin. ISBN 0140032738.
References
- John Wells. Princess Caraboo: her true story (1994), ISBN 0-330-33630-4
A band, which started in January of 2014.
External links
- John Mathew Gutch. Caraboo: A Narrative of a Singular Imposition, at http://www.resologist.net/carabooa.htm
- Mary Willcocks & the Princess Caraboo Hoax: Comprehensive article on the Mysterious People website
- Princess Caraboo: Article at the Museum of Hoaxes.