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<h3>Baroness Burdett-Coutts.</h3><SPAN href="images/c18baroness.jpg"><br/>
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<p>We hear, with comparative frequency, of great gifts made by
men: George Peabody and Johns Hopkins, Ezra Cornell and Matthew
Vassar, Commodore Vanderbilt and Leland Stanford. But gifts of
millions have been rare from women. Perhaps this is because
they have not, as often as men, had the control of immense
wealth.</p>
<p>It is estimated that Baroness Burdett-Coutts has already
given away from fifteen to twenty million dollars, and is
constantly dispensing her fortune. She is feeling, in her
lifetime, the real joy of giving. How many benevolent persons
lose all this joy, by waiting till death before they bestow
their gifts.</p>
<p>This remarkable woman comes from a remarkable family. Her
father, Sir Francis Burdett, was one of England's most
prominent members of Parliament. So earnest and eloquent was he
that Canning placed him "very nearly, if not quite, at the head
of the orators of the day." His colleague from Westminster,
Hobhouse, said, "Sir Francis Burdett was endowed with qualities
rarely united. A manly understanding and a tender heart gave a
charm to his society such as I have never derived in any other
instance from a man whose principal pursuit was politics. He
was the delight both of young and old."</p>
<p>He was of fine presence, with great command of language,
natural, sincere, and impressive. After being educated at
Oxford, he spent some time in Paris during the early part of
the French Revolution, and came home with enlarged ideas of
liberty. With as much courage as eloquence, he advocated
liberty of the press in England, and many Parliamentary
reforms. Whenever there were misdeeds to be exposed, he exposed
them. The abuses of Cold Bath Fields and other prisons were
corrected through his searching public inquiries.</p>
<p>When one of his friends was shut up in Newgate for impugning
the conduct of the House of Commons, Sir Francis took his part,
and for this it was ordered that he too be arrested. Believing
in free speech as he did, he denied the right of the House of
Commons to arrest him, and for nearly three days barricaded his
house, till the police forcibly entered, and carried him to the
Tower. A riot resulted, the people assaulting the police and
the soldiers, for the statesman was extremely popular. Several
persons were killed in the tumult.</p>
<p>Nine years later, in 1819, because he condemned the
proceedings of the Lancashire magistrates in a massacre case,
he was again arrested for libel (?). His sentence was three
months' imprisonment, and a fine of five thousand dollars. The
banknote with which the money was paid is still preserved in
the Bank of England, "with an inscription in Burdett's own
writing, that to save his life, which further imprisonment
threatened to destroy, he submitted to be robbed."</p>
<p>For thirty years he represented Westminster, fearless in
what he considered right; strenuous for the abolition of
slavery, and in all other reforms. Napoleon said at St. Helena,
if he had invaded England as he had intended, he would have
made it a republic, with Sir Francis Burdett, the popular idol,
at its head.</p>
<p>Wealthy himself, Sir Francis married Sophia, the youngest
daughter of the wealthy London banker, Thomas Coutts. One son
and five daughters were born to them, the youngest Angela
Georgina (April 21, 1814), now the Baroness Burdett-Coutts. Mr.
Coutts was an eccentric and independent man, who married for
his first wife an excellent girl of very humble position. Their
children, from the great wealth of the father, married into the
highest social rank, one being Marchioness of Bute, one
countess of Guilford, and the third Lady Burdett.</p>
<p>When Thomas Coutts was eighty-four he married for the second
time, a well-known actress, Harriet Mellon, who for seven
years, till his death, took excellent care of him. He left her
his whole fortune, amounting to several millions, feeling,
perhaps, that he had provided sufficiently for his daughters at
their marriage, by giving them a half-million each. But Harriet
Mellon, with a fine sense of honor, felt that the fortune
belonged to his children. Though she married five years later
the Duke of St. Albans, twenty-four years old, about half her
own age, at her death, in ten years, she left the whole
property, some fifteen millions, to Mr. Coutts' granddaughter,
Angela Burdett. Only one condition was imposed,--that the young
lady should add the name of Coutts to her own.</p>
<p>Miss Angela Burdett-Coutts became, therefore, at
twenty-three, the sole proprietor of the great Coutts
banking-house, which position she held for thirty years, and
the owner of an immense fortune. Very many young men manifested
a desire to help care for the property, and to share it with
her, but she seems from the first to have had but one definite
life-purpose,--to spend her money for the good of the human
race. She had her father's strength of character, was well
educated, and was a friend of royalty itself. Alas, how many
young women, with fifteen million dollars in hand, and the sum
constantly increasing, would have preferred a life of display
and self-aggrandizement rather than visiting the poor and the
sorrowing!</p>
<p>Baroness Burdett-Coutts is now over seventy, and for fifty
years her name has been one of the brightest and noblest in
England, or, indeed, in the world. Crabb Robinson said, she is
"the most generous, and delicately generous, person I ever
knew."</p>
<p>Her charities have extended in every direction. Among her
first good works was the building of two large churches, one at
Carlisle, and another, St. Stephen's, at Westminster, the
latter having also three schools and a parsonage. But Great
Britain did not require all her gifts. Gospel work was needed
in Australia, Africa, and British America. She therefore
endowed three colonial bishoprics, at Adelaide, Cape Town, and
in British Columbia, with a quarter of a million dollars. In
South Australia she also provided an institution for the
improvement of the aborigines, who were ignorant, and for whom
the world seemed to care little.</p>
<p>She has generously aided her own sex. Feeling that sewing
and other household work should be taught in the national
schools, as from her labors among the poor she had seen how
often food was badly cooked, and mothers were ignorant of
sewing, she gave liberally to the government for this purpose.
Her heart also went out to children in the remote districts,
who were missing all school privileges, and for these she
arranged a plan of "travelling teachers," which was heartily
approved by the English authorities. Even now in these later
years the Baroness may often be seen at the night-schools of
London, offering prizes, or encouraging the young men and women
in their desire to gain knowledge after the hard day's work is
done. She has opened "Reformatory Homes" for girls, and great
good has resulted.</p>
<p>Like Peabody, she has transformed some of the most degraded
portions of London by her improved tenement houses for the
poor. One place, called Nova Scotia gardens,--the term
"gardens" was a misnomer,--she purchased, tore down the old
rookeries where people slept and ate in filth and rags, and
built tasteful homes for two hundred families, charging for
them low and weekly rentals. Close by she built Columbia
Market, costing over a million dollars, intended for the
convenience of small dealers and people in that locality, where
clean, healthful food could be procured. She opened a museum
and reading-room for the neighborhood, and brought order and
taste out of squalor and distress.</p>
<p>This building she presented to the city of London, and in
acknowledgment of the munificent gift, the Common Council
presented her, July, 1872, in a public ceremony, the freedom of
the city, an uncommon honor to a woman. It was accompanied by a
complimentary address, enclosed in a beautiful gold casket with
several compartments. One bore the arms of the Baroness, while
the other seven represented tableaux emblematic of her noble
life, "Feeding the Hungry," "Giving Drink to the Thirsty,"
"Clothing the Naked," "Visiting the Captive," "Lodging the
Homeless," "Visiting the Sick," and "Burying the Dead." The
four cardinal virtues, Prudence, Temperance, Fortitude, and
Justice, supported the box at the four corners, while the lid
was surmounted by the arms of the city.</p>
<p>The Baroness made an able response to the address of the
Council, instead of asking some gentleman to reply for her.
Women who can do valuable benevolent work should be able to
read their own reports, or say what they desire to say in
public speech, without feeling that they have in the slightest
degree departed from the dignity and delicacy of their
womanhood.</p>
<p>Two years later, 1874, Edinburgh, for her many charities,
also presented the Baroness the freedom of the city. Queen
Victoria, three years before this, in June, 1871, had made her
a peer of the realm.</p>
<p>In Spitalfields, London, where the poverty was very great,
she started a sewing-school for adult women, and provided not
only work for them, but food as well, so that they might earn
for themselves rather than receive charity. To furnish this
work, she took contracts from the government. From this school
she sent out nurses among the sick, giving them medical
supplies, and clothes for the deserving. When servants needed
outfits, the Baroness provided them, aiding in all ways those
who were willing to work. All this required much executive
ability.</p>
<p>So interested is she in the welfare of poor children, that
she has converted some of the very old burying-grounds of the
city, where the bodies have long since gone back to dust, into
playgrounds, with walks, and seats, and beds of flowers. Here
the children can romp from morning till night, instead of
living in the stifled air of the tenement houses. In old St.
Pancras churchyard, now used as a playground, she has erected a
sundial as a memorial to its illustrious dead.</p>
<p>Not alone does Lady Burdett-Coutts build churches, and help
women and girls. She has fitted hundreds of boys for the Royal
Navy; educated them on her training-ships. She usually tries
them in a shoe-black brigade, and if they show a desire to be
honest and trustworthy, she provides homes, either in the navy
or in some good trade.</p>
<p>When men are out of work, she encourages them in various
ways. When the East End weavers had become reduced to poverty
by the decay of trade, she furnished funds for them to emigrate
to Queensland, with their families. A large number went
together, and formed a prosperous and happy colony, gratefully
sending back thanks to their benefactor. They would have
starved, or, what is more probable, gone into crime in London;
now they were contented and satisfied in their new home.</p>
<p>When the inhabitants of Girvan, Scotland, were in distress,
she advanced a large sum to take all the needy families to
Australia. Here in America we talk every now and then of
forming societies to help the poor to leave the cities and go
West, and too often the matter ends in talk; while here is a
woman who forms a society in and of herself, and sends the
suffering to any part of the world, expecting no money return
on the capital used. To see happy and contented homes grow from
our expenditures is such an investment of capital as helps to
bring on the millennium.</p>
<p>When the people near Skibbereen, Ireland, were in want, she
sent food, and clothing, and fishing-tackle, to enable them to
carry on their daily employment of fishing. She supplied the
necessary funds for Sir Henry James' topographical survey of
Jerusalem, in the endeavor to discover the remains of King
Solomon's temple, and offered to restore the ancient aqueduct,
to supply the city with water. Deeply interested in art, she
has aided many struggling artists. Her homes also contain many
valuable pictures.</p>
<p>The heart of the Baroness seems open to distress from every
clime. In 1877, when word reached England of the suffering
through war of the Bulgarian and Turkish peasantry, she
instituted the "Compassion Fund," by which one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars in money and stores were sent, and
thousands of lives saved from starvation and death. For this
generosity the Sultan conferred upon her the Order of Medjidie,
the first woman, it is said, who has received this
distinction.</p>
<p>In all this benevolence she has not overlooked the animal
creation. She has erected four handsome drinking fountains: one
in Victoria Park, one at the entrance to the Zoological Gardens
in Regent's Park, one near Columbia Market, and one in the city
of Manchester. At the opening of the latter, the citizens gave
Lady Burdett-Coutts a most enthusiastic reception. To the
unique and interesting home for lost dogs in London, she has
contributed very largely. If the poor animals could speak, how
would they thank her for a warm bed to lie on, and proper food
to eat!</p>
<p>Her private gifts to the poor have been numberless. Her city
house, I Stratton Street, Piccadilly, and her country home at
Holly Lodge, Highgate, are both well known. When, in 1868, the
great Reform procession passed her house, and she was at the
window, though half out of sight, says a person who was
present, "in one instant a shout was raised. For upwards of two
hours and a half the air rang with the reiterated
huzzas--huzzas unanimous and heart-felt, as if representing a
national sentiment."</p>
<p>At Holly Lodge, which one passes in visiting the grave of
George Eliot at Highgate Cemetery, the Baroness makes thousands
of persons happy year by year. Now she invites two thousand
Belgian volunteers to meet the Prince and Princess of Wales,
with some five hundred royal and distinguished guests; now she
throws open her beautiful gardens to hundreds of
school-children, and lets them play at will under the oak and
chestnut trees; and now she entertains at tea all her tenants,
numbering about a thousand. So genial and considerate is she
that all love her, both rich and poor. She has fine manners and
an open, pleasant face.</p>
<p>For some years a young friend, about half her own age, Mr.
William Ashmead-Bartlett, had assisted her in dispensing her
charities, and in other financial matters. At one time he went
to Turkey, at her request, using wisely the funds committed to
his trust. Baroness Coutts had refused many offers of marriage,
but she finally desired to bestow her hand upon this young but
congenial man. On February 12, 1881, they were wedded in Christ
Church, Piccadilly. Her husband took the name of Mr.
Burdett-Coutts Bartlett, and has since become a capable member
of Parliament. The marriage proved a happy one.</p>
<p>The final years of the Baroness' long, useful life were
rather secluded, being spent at her London residence, or at her
delightful country place near Highgate, where she formerly
entertained largely.</p>
<p>On Christmas Eve, in 1906, she became ill of bronchitis, and
though her wonderful vitality led her to revive somewhat, she
finally succumbed on December 30, at the age of ninety-two. She
was greatly beloved from the highest to the humblest citizens.
Queen Alexandra sent repeated inquiries and messages. King
Edward once said that he regarded the Baroness, after his
mother, as the most remarkable woman in England. Her life was a
link with the past, as it began during the reign of Emperor
Napoleon I, and witnessed the reigns of five British
sovereigns. Throughout it was spent in doing good.</p>
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