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Jemima, William Amhurst, Louisa
Thomas and Jemima had three children just over three years:
1. Jemima Frances Sophia born on 15 September 1813 in the Southampton suburb of Shirley1) and died 29 May 1891 at Howden Lodge, Clarendon Road, Southsea, Hampshire.2) The valuation of her belongings for probate purposes was £191/7/0.3) Part of Jemima's and her sister's wealth came from a successful court case (decided in 1873) to establish they were entitled to a share of the estate of their uncle Francis Dickson who died in India in 1822 (another uncle, William Dickson, was in the Bengal Military Service and died in Bengal in 1828.4) The valuation of her belongings for probate purposes was £191/7/0.5) She had also invested in various overseas bonds - Egyptian (£600), Russian (£1,000), Honduras (£200), Turkish (£300), Costa Rica (£300) and shares in other overseas ventures in USA and Brazil.6) The valuation of her belongings for probate purposes was £191/7/0.7)
These photos are studio ones from TLM-P’s album.8) They are labelled ‘Aunt J.’ and ‘Aunt Jemima M.P’. The former has a signature on the back dated 1872; the signature ends with Prior, and is possibly JMPrior - Jemima Murray Prior?
Jemima, like her sister Louisa, remained single. She was pious and both wealthy and generous enough to leave £200 to set up a charity, ‘The Prior Gift’. This Gift contributed to the salary of the verger at the Holy Trinity Church, Shirley, Southampton, as well for an annual distribution of food tokens to 36 ‘deserving poor’.9) Faced with large scale poverty, philanthropists in the Victorian age normally restricted aid to those considered ‘deserving’, that is, poor through no fault of their own and living blameless lives. The latter requirement alone substantially reduced the call on philanthropists’ purses! Her other legacies included £1,000 and a music box to TLM-P and a green Indian shawl and a half-hoop diamond ring worth a combined £4 to Nora M-P, Paintings. lace and jewellery etc worth £62/17/6 to Thomas de M. M-P, and items of smaller value to Florence (Thomas de M M-P's wife) and Lizzie Jardine.10)
See photo taken by Andrew Darbyshire at Southampton church, Andrew Darbyshire, A Fair Slice of St Lucia, St Lucia History Group Research Paper No.8. pp.59,60. https://brisbanehistorywest.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/08-a-fair-slice-of-st-lucia-thomas-lodge-murray-prior.pdf
2. William Amherst (1814-15), who was born and died in London when he was about 6 weeks old; he was buried at St. Paul's, London.11) and
3. Louisa Elizabeth Catherine (26 December 1816–24 July 1899). She was born at Boulogne, France and died at 23 Fernlea Road, Balham, Surrey, a suburb of London. Rosa Praed was the executor of her estate valued at £4,807.3512)
Given the resemblance to the portraits thought to be Eliza Prior, and to the ones below, this miniature and its copy is likely to show the young Jemima or Louisa.13)
These three photos are studio ones from TLM-P’s album, labelled ‘Aunt Louisa’ and 'Aunt Louisa M.P’.14) The second photo has the inscription on the back ‘For Morres[?] with Aunt Louisa's Love’. Judging from Louisa's large Crinoline, the photos were taken in the mid-nineteenth century.
Louisa was baptised on 22 January 1817 by the Chaplain of the 18th Hussars, the Regiment in which her father then served 15): this fits in with her being born in Boulogne, France.16) She was baptised again two years later at Wells cathedral.17)
In 1863, Louisa lived at 18 Oxford Terrace, St Peters, Islington, London ; by 1882 (when her brother visited her) she lived in the suburb of Balham in south London.18) After her sister Jemima's death, she moved into Jemima's home at Howden Lodge, 14 Clarendon Road, Southsea.19) Her death certificate described her 'rank or profession' as 'Of Independent means' and having died 14 days after experiencing apoplexy (a cerebral haemorrhage or stroke). Her niece and executor Rosa Praed was there when she died.20)
Middle-class women were expected to play the piano and Louisa was no exception. Some of her sheet music has survived, so we can imagine her at her piano playing these Verdi variations. 21)