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Mary Wandesford

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Mary Wandesford (1655–1726) was a devout religious unmarried woman, who was noted for creating an Anglican vocation for women similar to herself. The vocation still stands today.

Background

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Mary was born as the eldest daughter of five children, of Sir Christopher Wandesford, 1st Baronet Wandesford of Kirklington, and his wife Eleanor Lowther, the daughter of Sir John Lowther of Lowther Hall. They derived most of their wealth from coal mines in their Estate at Castlecomer in Ireland. Mary's brother, George Wandesford, was made Viscount Castlecomer in 1707. She was baptized in the church at Kirklington on 23 June 1655.[1]

To pursue her religion, Mary Wandesford moved from her family's estate in rural Yorkshire to the city of York. There, she rented lodgings in a cathedral close and associated herself with the religious sphere. This included her expenditures in service to the church. One offering still notable today are the black gilded iron gates of the York cathedral.[2]

Wandesford House

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She is known for the Wandesford House, a charity. Wandesford had never married and in her will, dated 4 November, 1725, left funds for the creation of a "religious house of Protestant retirement"[3] in York for ten poor unmarried woman, thereby creating a religious community for single women. It was the norm during the time, though not a law, that siblings inherited. However, as a single woman, Wandesford exercised her freedom in her will. It was also notable because of the lack of religious vocationals available, especially for Anglican women, a circumstance she tried to change by her own means through her will. She bequeathed sizeable properties in Brompton on Swale, with a mortgage worth up to £1,200 and an additional £1,200 in South Sea Company Stocks and annuities, profits of which were not only used for the endowment of the institution, but also to pay for a schoolmaster to teach poor children at Kirklington. It was also her wish that at her funeral, "six of the poorest unmarried women in Kirklington may have white vales from head to foot prepared for them and white gloves, and carry [her] corps into the church...Let the white vales be such cloth as will do them service hereafter."[4]

Further reading

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  • "Borthwick Catalogue." Wandesford, Mary, 1655-1726.[5]
  • Froide, Amy M. Never Married: Singlewomen in Early Modern England. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
  • FROIDE, AMY M.. 2009. "The Religious Lives of Singlewomen in the Anglo-atlantic World: Quaker Missionaries, Protestant Nuns, and Covert Catholics". In Women, Religion & the Atlantic World, 1600-1800, edited by Daniella Kostroun and Lisa Vollendorf, 60–78. University of Toronto Press.[6]
  • Price, George. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Exchequer from Easter Term, 54 Geo. III. to Both Inclusive .. London: W. Clarke and Sons, 1816.
  • Thornton, Alice, and Charles Jackson. The Autobiography of Mrs. Alice Thornton of East Newton, Co. York. Durham (England): Pub. for the Society by Andrews and, 1875.
  • Troubat, Francis J., George Price, Edmund Robert Daniell, Thomas M'Cleland, and John Wightwick. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Exchequer, at Law and in Equity, and in the Exchequer Chamber in Equity and in Error. Philadelphia: R.H. Small, 1835.

References

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  1. ^ "Mary WANDESFORD". genealogy.links.org. Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  2. ^ Halfpenny, Joseph. Gothic Ornaments in the Cathedral Church of York: Drawn and Etched by Joseph Halfpenny. York: Geo. Peacock, printer, 1800. Plate 64
  3. ^ Vollendorf, Lisa; Kostroun, Daniella J. (2009-01-01). Women, Religion, and the Atlantic World (1600-1800). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802099068.
  4. ^ Thornton, Mrs Alice (Wandesford) (1875-01-01). The Autobiography of Mrs. Alice Thornton, of East Newton, Co. York. Society. p. 323. mary%2520wandesford.
  5. ^ "Wandesford, Mary, 1655-1726 - Borthwick Catalogue". borthcat.york.ac.uk. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
  6. ^ Women, Religion & the Atlantic World, 1600-1800. University of Toronto Press. 2009. doi:10.3138/j.ctt2ttv8q.7. ISBN 978-0-8020-9906-8.
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