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The Voyage of the Shalimar, 1859: The Man Who Sailed Away and the Wife He Left Behind
On 12 September 1859, Thomas Alexander Kidd stood on Liverpool’s bustling docks with his family, ready to leave everything behind. The former merchant, magistrate and police commissioner had sold his comfortable life for steerage tickets to New Zealand. Beside him waited his wife, Mary Agnes, and their six children—Eliza, Georgina, Mary, Helen, Frances and young…
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‘Improperly Married’: Coverture and the Victorian Women the Law Forgot’
Victorian England had no language for women like Mary Allott. Under the doctrine of coverture, Victorian marriage laws treated a wife as her husband’s property, with no separate legal existence of her own. Improperly married Victorian women lived inside that law, yet their particular situation had no name and no remedy. Not quite wives. Not…
