Emma Darwin: A Century of Family Letters 1792-1896 is a book in two volumes, edited by Henrietta Litchfield about her mother, Emma Darwin (née Wedgwood) and letters from their family. It was originally privately published in 1904 as Emma Darwin, Wife of Charles Darwin: A Century of Family Letters, but was publicly published under the shorter title in 1915 by John Murray.[1][2]
Dramatis personae
Mother's family
The book covers the life of Emma Darwin (1808–1896) but starts from 1796 with Emma's family background and the nine Allen sisters of Creselly, Pembrokeshire, and their two brothers. These, Emma's mother, aunts and uncles, were the children of John Bartlett Allen (1733–1803), and his first wife (married 1763) Elizabeth (née Hensleigh, c. 1738-1790), Emma's maternal grandparents:
The book was dedicated by Etty to her niece, Emma's granddaughter, Frances Cornford.
The Times described it as "an admirable piece of work, in which the editor, while largely effacing herself, yet gave a notable picture of an interesting family life".[3]
The book was reviewed in The Eugenics Review by Albert Seward who concluded that the book "bring[s] to us into the closest touch with wise and attractive personalities and at the same time they record facts of great scientific interest".[4]
In R. B. Freeman's Charles Darwin bibliography, he noted that the publication "contains a large number of letters from Charles and is an important source of information about his day to day and family life".[5]
The 1915 edition also contains a brief biography of Erasmus Darwin IV, Emma's grandson who had been recently killed in the First World War.[6]