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'Sophia Amelia Peabody Hawthorne' (
September 21,
1809–
February 26,
1871) was a
painter and
illustrator, born 'Sophia Amelia Peabody' in
Salem,
Massachusetts. She also published her
journals and various articles.
Peabody's father was the dentist Nathaniel Peabody, while her mother was the strong
Unitarian Elizabeth Palmer. She had three brothers; her sisters were
Elizabeth Palmer Peabody and Mary Tyler Peabody Mann,
Horace Mann's wife.
On
July 9,
1842, she and her neighbor
Nathaniel Hawthorne were married in Boston, five years after first meeting, by
James Freeman Clarke, a coupling that would prove happy for both of them. Both were considered relatively old for marriage (she was 32 and he was five days past his 36th birthday). Immediately after their wedding, they moved into
The Old Manse in
Concord, Massachusetts, a home they rented from the
Rev. William Emerson. The next day, Hawthorne wrote to his sister Louisa: "We are as happy as people can be, without making themselves ridiculous, and might be even happier; but, as a matter of taste, we choose to stop short at this point."
Hawthorne had been pursuing Sophia Peabody as far back as a letter dated
March 6,
1839.
Sophia had originally objected to marriage. Her health had been questionable since infancy and she was an occasional invalid. The possible reason for this was her dentist father prescribing a then-fashionable treatment for
teething pains that included
mercury.
They had three children: Una (b.
March 3,
1844), Julian (b.
May 22,
1846), and
Rose (b.
May 20,
1851).
Death, burial, and reburial
Nathaniel Hawthorne died in
1864, and Sophia moved to
England four years later in
1868 with her three children. In February
1871 she died of typhoid pneumonia, her oldest daughter Una soon following in
1877. Mother and daughter were buried in
Kensal Green Cemetery in
London, England.
Julian Hawthorne went on to be a moderately successful author writing about his father and other miscellaneous works. He died in
1934.
Rose went on to found the
Roman Catholic order of nuns, the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, based in
Hawthorne, New York, where she died in
1926. Care for the graves of Sophia and Una fell to this organization. When the grave sites were in need of costly repair, it was suggested the remains be moved to the Hawthorne family plot in
Concord, Massachusetts. In June 2006 the two were re-buried alongside Nathaniel in
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. A funeral was held for the family's descendants with representatives from the Dominican Sisters and a public ceremony was held at
The Old Manse to mark the occasion.
[1]
External links
★
"The Wife and Children of Nathaniel Hawthorne" at ''Hawthorne In Salem''
★
★
"Re-interment of Sophia and Una Hawthorne"
★
★
"Images Related to The Immediate Family of Nathaniel Hawthorne" including paintings and drawings of Sarah Peabody Hawthorne
★
''Passages from the English Note-Books of Nathaniel Hawthorne'' (1870) with Preface by Sophia Hawthorne
★
News story about reburial
★
News story about reburial
★
The Peabody Sisters
General references
★ McFarland, Philip: ''Hawthorne in Concord''. Grove Press, 2004.
1. ''Boston Globe'' article on reburial