Nancy (Mary) Ann Cooper

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Nancy Ann Hobson (Cooper), SM

Also Known As: "Mary / Tooting / Church"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Upper Tooting, Surrey, England (United Kingdom)
Death: January 14, 1911 (78-79)
Kensington, Greater London, UK
Place of Burial: Greater London, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Dr. Charles Cooper and Sarah Cooper
Husband of William Carey Hobson, SV/PROG 2; Robert Paxton Church and unknown Tooting
Father of Basil Edmund Church and Charles Henry Strachan Church
Brother of Sarah Lavinia Pain and Joseph Birch Cooper

Occupation: Author and Illustrator
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Nancy (Mary) Ann Cooper

http://www.careyclan.com/chap1.htm

Nancy 'Mary' Anne Cooper

  • b. Abt 1829,
  • d. 14 Jan 1911, West Kensington, London (Age ~ 82 years)
  • Married 18 Mar 1868

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Somerset East Old Families compiled by Duncan Ferguson

Marriages that took place at All Saints Anglican Church Somerset East

Robert Paxton CHURCH aged 30 X Mary Ann COOPER aged 22 of Somerset East on 10 April 1851. Agent of Somerset East.

Children

  • Basil Edmund * 17 Sept 1863

1881 Census

Grays Inn Lane, Pancras, London

Source Citation: Class: RG11; Piece: 192; Folio: 88; Page: 7; GSU roll: 1341043.

  • Mary A Hobson HD Widow 53 Dividends born Upper Tooting, Surrey
  • Basil E Church son UM 17 Medical Student born Cape Colony, South Africa

1891 Census

Source Citation: Class: RG12; Piece: 45; Folio: 122; Page: 21; GSU Roll: 6095155.

Fulham London aged 63, widow

1901 Census

North East Fulham, Fulham, London

Source Citation: Class: RG13; Piece: 62; Folio: 133; Page: 66.

Aged 73, widow, living on her own means. In the household visitor Sarah Veitch 70 born in Somerset east, Cape Colony

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Deaths Mar 1911

CAREY-HOBSON Mary A 83 Fulham 1a 237 South Africa Magazine 1-21-1911

DEATH OF MRS. CAREY HOBSON

Passing Away of the Well-Known South African Authoress

We regret to announce the death of Mrs. W. Carey Hobson, the veteran South African littérateur, at her residence in West Kensington last Saturday morning. The deceased lady had only been ill (from bronchitis) about a week. Her son, Dr. Basil Church, of Gloucester, was sent for, but "Granny" Hobson, as she was lovingly called by her friends, had got temporarily better, and he was able to return to his professional duties. There was, however, a relapse, and the much-lamented lady, conscious to the last, died a week ago. Mrs. Carey Hobson was the eldest daughter of Mr. Chas. Birch Cooper, surgeon, and about the age of twelve went out to South Africa with him about the year 1845. Her first husband was Mr. Robert Paxton Church, a barrister. They had only one child, the gentleman whose name we have mentioned. She lived for about a quarter of a century at Somerset East and later on, as the wife of Mr. William Carey Hobson (one of the 1821 settlers, we believe), in the Graaff-Reinet district. She was essentially an artistic and intellectual lady, and one of the most widely-read. Her paintings of Cape flora are to be seen in the South African section of the Victoria and Albert Museum. She took an active part in arranging the South African Court at the great Exhibition of 1862, and for her skill in this arrangement was congratulated by the late King Edward, then Prince of Wales. In her second widowhood she settled in England in 1873, and devoted herself to the profession of letters, being at one time Editress of an important Sunday magazine.

She was also a contributor of children's stories to various well-known publications, and brought out two South African novels, which at the time attracted much attention, "The Farm on the Karroo" being subsequently translated into Dutch and published in Holland. This contained accounts of journeys in bullock wagons, and gave good descriptions of Colonial flowers. Her other book, "At Home in the Transvaal," was a picture of life in the Transvaal in story form about the time of the first Boer war, as also of early life at the Diamond Fields. Up to the end of her long life Mrs. Carey Hobson remained an incessant reader, and followed the course of events in the histories of the nations with an unflagging attention. But her interest in matters South African was always particularly keen, and she was a close reader of South Africa from the beginning of its career up to the very end of her life. The deceased lady was a Fellow of the Imperial Institute from its foundation, and an Associate of the Royal Colonial Institute. Her widely-extended hospitality was a striking feature, 5 Beaumont Crescent being a well-known resort of Colonists. Writers, artists, and politicians constituted her many friends, among them the late Sir Charles Mills, the late Sir Thomas Fuller, Lady Fuller, Olive Schreiner, Mr. Rider Haggard, the Hon. Alex. And Mrs. Wilmot, Miss Frere, Jean Inglis, the artist, &c. One of the last to enjoy her ever-ready hospitality was Francis Bancroft, the South African novelist, who spent the Christmas and New Year season under the roof of this sister writer of the past, taking leave of her in apparently normal health about a week previous to her death. With her husband, the late Mr. Carey Hobson, she showed great hospitality to missionaries and clergy in South Africa, Sunday services being held for many years on the well-known farmstead Ebenezer in the Graaff-Reinet district. Mrs. Carey Hobson was a woman of the widest charitable instincts, and a generous helper in cases of destitution among the poor in London. The departed lady had friends everywhere, who loved her for her bright and cheerful disposition, and for her kindness of heart. Her death will be keenly felt by her only child (Dr. Church) and by her only sister, Mrs. Pain, of Heath Park House, Leighton Buzzard, as well as by her many relatives and friends

https://s3.amazonaws.com/photos.geni.com/p13/83/fc/d2/c0/5344483c0e77f122/bur57pen_original.jpg


She was an authoress and wrote a book on the family and life in the Karoo, which is very difficult to source, but Roswitha Hobson in Grahamstown has a copy. She was a widow at the time of her marriage, with Cooper being her maiden name. Other names she had were Tooting and Church.

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http://www.eggsa.org/newspapers/index.php/grahamstown-journal/100-g...

Grahamstown Journal 1851 - 2 - April to June Written by Sue Mackay. Posted in The Grahamstown Journal

Saturday 26 April 1851

MARRIED at Somerset (East) on the 10th instant, Robert Paxton, only son of the late Rev. Charles CHURCH, Chaplain in the H.E.I.C.S, to Mary Ann, eldest daughter of Charles COOPER Esq, FRCS, Surgeon and Medical Officiate of the above place.

"South Africa, Church of the Province of South Africa, Parish Registers, 1801-2004," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1951-23580-44661-76?cc=146... : 21 May 2014), South Africa > Cape of Good Hope > Grahamstown, Sidbury and Somerset, All Saints and St Peter > Baptisms, marriages, burials 1849-1876 > image 48 of 77; William Cullen Library, Wits University, Johannesburg.

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Nancy (Mary) Ann Cooper's Timeline

1832
1832
Upper Tooting, Surrey, England (United Kingdom)
1862
April 29, 1862
King William's Town, Eastern Cape, South Africa
1863
November 17, 1863
Somerset East, Cape Colony, South Africa
1870
May 21, 1870
Age 65
Carlisle Bridge, Eastern Cape, South Africa
1911
January 14, 1911
Age 79
Kensington, Greater London, UK
1911
Age 79
Kensington, Greater London, United Kingdom