Charlotte Maria Tucker

Charlotte Maria Tucker
Born May 2, 1821
Barnet, Middlesex, England
Died December 2, 1893 (aged 72)
Amritsar, India
Pen name A.L.O.E. (a Lady of England)
Occupation Writer
Nationality English
Period 19th century
Genre Children's Literature

Charlotte Maria Tucker (May 8, 1821 – December 2, 1893) was a prolific writer and poet for children and adults, who wrote under the pseudonym A.L.O.E. (a Lady of England)

Early life

Charlotte Tucker was born at Friern Hatch near Friern Barnet, Middlesex, the daughter of Henry St George Tucker (1771/2–1851), twice elected chairman of the British East India Company, and his wife Jane Boswell (died 1869), the daughter of an Edinburgh writer to the signet. The family moved to London in 1822. Her father was the author of Tragedies: 'Harold' and 'Camoens' (London, 1835).[1]

Charlotte had a secular upbringing, and her first writings were poems and plays to amuse the family. In 1847, she took charge of the education of her brother Robert's three children. Her earliest book The Claremont Tales (1852) was, she said, "originally composed for young children under my charge."[2]

Moral tales

The work of Charlotte Tucker as a children's writer was imbued with her Evangelical religious beliefs. Most of her stories were allegories with a clear moral, but she leavened her didacticism with a degree of realism and naturalism.[3] As she explained in an 1851 letter to a publisher, "My position in life renders me independent of any exertions of my own; I pray but for God's blessing upon my attempts to instruct His lambs in the things which concern their everlasting welfare."[4]

Many of her 150 or more titles appeared in magazines before being collected into books. Among her many titles were The Rambles of a Rat, Parliament in the Play-Room (1863), Triumph over Midian (1866), A Wreath of Smoke (1871) and Pomegranates from the Punjab (1878). A biography by a fellow children's writer, Agnes Giberne, appeared in 1895.[5]

The proceeds from her writings she often devoted to missionary or charity work. Tucker's contemporaries criticized the strong didacticism in her writing, but her creed was concerned not with original sin but with the chance of improvement for all people and races. Her realistic portrayals of the poor may have drawn on her experience as a workhouse visitor in Marylebone.[6] Titles of hers are still occasionally reissued by publishers specializing in Christian books.[7]

Missionary work

Many of Tucker's most interesting stories are set in India. Some were translated into Indian languages. She set out for India in 1875, at the age of 54, having taught herself Hindustani. There she worked as a self-supporting volunteer missionary to Amritsar, Punjab, through the Indian Female Normal School and Instruction Society. Three years later she moved to nearby Batala, where she worked in a boys' school and as a teacher of Christian beliefs to native women. She died in Amritsar on December 2, 1893.[8]

References

  1. ODNB entry for Henry St George Tucker by Katherine Prior. Retrieved 12 October 2012. Pay-walled.
  2. ODNB entry for Charlotte Maria Tucker by Kimberley Reynolds. Retrieved 12 October 2012. Pay-walled.
  3. Orlando Project. Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  4. Quoted in Gillian Avery: Nineteenth Century Children... (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1965), p. 101.
  5. A Lady of England. The Life and Letters of Charlotte Maria Tucker (London : Hodder & Stoughton, 1895). Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  6. ODNB entry for Charlotte Maria Tucker.
  7. E. g. Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  8. ODNB entry for Charlotte Maria Tucker.

Further reading

External links