Georgiana Frances Hare-Naylor

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Georgiana Frances Hare-Naylor (Shipley)

Also Known As: "Georgina"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Saint Asaph, Denbighshire, Wales, United Kingdom
Death: 1806 (46-55)
Lausanne, Lausanne District, Vaud, Switzerland
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rt Rev Jonathan Shipley, Bishop of St Asaph's and Anna Maria Shipley
Wife of Francis Hare-Naylor
Mother of Francis George Hare; Rev. Augustus William Hare; Julius Charles Hare; Marcus Theodore Hare and Anna-Maria Clementine Hare
Sister of Very Rev. William Davies Shipley; Anna Maria Jones, Lady Jones; Amelia Sloper; Elizabeth Shipley and Catherine Louisa "Kitty" Shipley

Occupation: artist
Managed by: Leoné Gardner
Last Updated:

About Georgiana Frances Hare-Naylor

Georgiana Shipley Hare-Naylor

? - 1805

Georgiana Shipley, one of the daughters of Jonathan Shipley, the Anglican bishop of St. Asaph, was the kind of educated young woman whose company Franklin found so congenial. Miss Shipley was intelligent, an artist, an outspoken member of the liberal Whig circle in which both her father and Franklin moved.

Her correspondence with Franklin is preserved in his papers housed at the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. See Sellers, pp. 267-269, Pl. 25.

source: http://www.benfranklin300.org/frankliniana/people.php?id=292


“From Benjamin Franklin to Anna Mordaunt Shipley, 13 August 1771,” Founders Online, National Archives, last modified December 28, 2016, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-18-02-0127. [Original source: The Papers of Benjamin Franklin, vol. 18, January 1 through December 31, 1771, ed. William B. Willcox. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1974, pp. 199–202.]

Anna (Mordaunt) Shipley was Georgina's mother. Franklin is describing to her his conversation with Anna's daughter (Georgiana's sister), the then 11 year old Kitty.

"... We began with Georgiana.9 She thought a Country Gentleman, that lov’d Travelling and would take her with him, that lov’d Books and would hear her read to him; I added, that had a good Estate and was a Member of Parliament and lov’d to see an Experiment now and then. This she agreed to; so we set him down for Georgiana, and went on to Betsy.2

  • 9. Georgiana (1756–1806), named after her cousin the Duchess of Devonshire, grew up to be the most colorful member of the family. She was both a beauty and an excellent conversationalist, versed in modern languages and the classics, and she studied painting under Sir Joshua Reynolds. Her husband, whom she married in 1784 much against her father’s will, was a far cry from the one Kitty and bf had imagined for her. Francis Hare-Naylor, an impecunious author, belonged to the Duchess’s circle; she provided him with an annuity, on which the couple spent most of the rest of their lives abroad. DNB under Hare-Naylor.

From https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hare-Naylor,_Francis_(DNB00)_

... Francis Hare-Naylor became one of the brilliant circle which gathered round Georgiana Cavendish, duchess of Devonshire [q. v.], at Chiswick. By her he was introduced to her beautiful cousin, Georgiana, fourth daughter of Jonathan Shipley, bishop of St. Asaph [q. v.], by his wife, Anna Maria Mordaunt, niece of the famous Earl of Peterborough. Georgiana Shipley was accomplished in modern languages, had studied classics with her father, had been petted by Benjamin Franklin, had learnt painting in Reynolds's studio, and was a general favourite for her conversational powers upon all subjects. Her eldest sister, wife of Sir William Jones, the famous orientalist, had just sailed for India (April 1783), when she made the acquaintance of Hare-Naylor. The Duchess of Devonshire never lost an opportunity of throwing them together, and Bishop Shipley was at last persuaded to invite him to Twyford. The following day he was arrested for debt while driving in the episcopal coach with Georgiana and her parents. He was then forbidden the house, but disguised himself as a beggar, and met her while driving with her family. Her recognition of him produced a crisis. His father refused to do anything for Hare, but the Duchess of Devonshire gave the pair an annuity of two hundred a year, and on this they married. They went to Carlsruhe, and afterwards to the north of Italy. Here their four sons, Francis, Augustus, Julius, and Marcus, were born, and here Mrs. Hare-Naylor devoted herself to painting, the family eventually settling at Bologna, to which an agreeable literary society was attracted by the university. With Clotilda Tambroni, at that time the famous female professor of Greek, Mrs. Hare-Naylor formed a devoted friendship.
In 1797 Hare's father died, and it was found that his intention of leaving everything to his second wife was frustrated by her having built her new house of Hurstmonceaux Place upon entailed land. The Hare-Naylors therefore set off for England, leaving three of their children in the care of Clotilda Tambroni and Father Emmanuele Aponte, an old Spanish priest, and appointing the famous Mezzofanti tutor of their eldest son, who at eleven years old learnt to read the deepest Greek books, and to write Greek epigrams upon his step-grandmother.
The Hare-Naylors settled at Hurstmonceaux, and for years were engaged in reconciling residence in a large and expensive house with an ever-diminishing income. Hare-Naylor's vehement democratic principles made enemies and lost friends. He indignantly rejected, as aristocratic, the distinction of a baronetcy. From 1799 (when the Hare-Naylors went to Italy to fetch home their children) life became an increasing struggle with the requirements of an impoverished estate. Hare-Naylor wrote plays, 'The Mirror' and 'The Age of Chivalry,' which were rejected at Drury Lane. In 1801 he published his 'History of the Helvetic Republics,' in two volumes, which was also a severe disappointment, though it passed into a second enlarged edition (4 vols. 1809). Misfortune soured his temper, and the family was only saved from great privations by the intervention and help of the now widowed Lady Jones.
In 1803 Mrs. Hare-Naylor began a large series of pictures representing Hurstmonceaux Castle as it appeared before the destruction. She finished her work, but the minute application seriously affected her health, and brought on total blindness in her forty-eighth year. In the following year the Hare-Naylors left Hurstmonceaux for ever, and went to reside at Weimar, attracted partly by its famous literary society, but more by the kind friendship of the reigning duchess, who paid daily visits to the blind lady. Whilst at Weimar, Hare-Naylor published the very dull novel of 'Theodore, or the Enthusiast,' for which Flaxman, whose sister had been his children's governess, and who had already executed many portraits of the family, made a beautiful series of illustrations. On Easter Sunday, 1806, Georgiana Hare-Naylor died at Lausanne, leaving her children to the care of Lady Jones.


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Georgiana Frances Hare-Naylor's Timeline

1755
1755
Saint Asaph, Denbighshire, Wales, United Kingdom
1786
January 6, 1786
Herstmonceux, East Sussex, England, United Kingdom
1792
November 17, 1792
Herstmonceux, East Sussex, England, United Kingdom
1795
September 13, 1795
1796
November 9, 1796
1799
1799
1806
1806
Age 51
Lausanne, Lausanne District, Vaud, Switzerland