Tag: Mary on the Green

  • Mary Wollstonecraft statue on Newington Green could receive government backing

    Portrait of Mary Wollstonecraft by John Opie (c.1797). Wikimedia Commons
    Portrait of Mary Wollstonecraft by John Opie (c.1797). Wikimedia Commons

    A statue of Mary Wollstonecraft on Newington Green could finally happen after two political heavy-weights threw their support behind the long-running campaign.

    The Education Secretary and Minister for Women Nicky Morgan, as well as the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, have praised the efforts of the Mary on the Green campaign to commission a statue of Enlightenment thinker Wollstonecraft on Newington Green, next to the school where she once taught.

    “It’s time we celebrated the women who have shaped our country,” Mr Corbyn said. “Let’s start with a statue of Mary Wollstonecraft – one of the great pioneers of women’s equality.”

    Mr Corbyn described as “shocking” how the vast majority of statues and memorials in the UK depict men, adding: “It is time to redress the balance and honour the millions of women who have transformed Britain for the better.”

    The Independent last weekend reported that the Department for Education may get involved with the campaign to commemorate Wollstonecraft, who in the late 18th century penned the philosophical treatise A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.

    “Nicky Morgan’s people have expressed an interest. They’re looking over our numbers and we’re really excited about that support,” said Bee Rowlatt, chair of Mary on the Green.

    Asked to comment by the East End Review, Ms Morgan said:

    “We need to make sure girls grow up seeing influential women like this represented – in literature, through education and among the statues we have to celebrate the work and sacrifice of our most influential figures.

    “I welcome any efforts to raise this important issue and ensure that women take their rightful place in our cultural history.”

    As the spokesperson for Mary on the Green, whose supporters number the likes of Shami Chakrabarti, the director of Liberty, and the broadcaster Melvyn Bragg, Ms Rowlatt said that it was important that Wollstonecraft be celebrated in the part of London that helped form her radical views.

    “She lived in this radical community of extraordinary people like Richard Pryce and where she became a writer and the huge Enlightenment philosopher for which we value her today.

    “People say, ‘Why a statue? Why not equal pay or FGM? But this is about visibility of women, and a headcount of London statues shows that nine out of 10 of them are of men.

    “She’s an icon of social mobility and I think it’s really important that a woman of her stature, who came from nowhere and achieved so much but is yet to be recognised, is visible.”

    www.maryonthegreen.org

  • The author following in the footsteps of Mary Wollstonecraft

    Mary Wollstonecraft stencil by Stewy
    Mary Wollstonecraft stencil by Stewy

    In Search of Mary by journalist Bee Rowlatt is a love story inside a love story. In actual fact, it is part travelogue, part biography; a history of groundbreaking feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, and a walking in her shoes. Rowlatt was inspired by Wollstonecraft’s own book – Letters Written in Sweden, Norway and Denmark, first published in 1796 – which narrates her intrepid travels, spurred on by a mission to recover stolen treasure for her lover, Gilbert Imlay. Rowlatt’s book, in turn, is testament to her admiration for Wollstonecraft. Or, as she admits, her outright ‘groupie’ status.

    I meet Rowlatt at BBC Broadcasting House, in the midst of her busy press schedule and on the day of the book launch. Rowlatt is proud to call her own relationship with Wollstonecraft is “a full blown love affair”. A love affair which, like Wollstonecraft’s own, led her to embark across lands and seas – but in search of Mary, rather than of stolen treasure. And like Wollstonecraft, Rowlatt travelled to Scandinavia and beyond with a baby on board.

    Before her overseas explorations however, Wollstonecraft’s home of Stoke Newington provided fertile ground for her radical roots. “It was absolutely critical in the making of her,” explains Rowlatt. Living in the then radical village allowed Wollstonecraft to tread new paths in more ways than one: she was a young woman living from her writing – “virtually unheard of at the time”. She also founded a school whilst living in the area, and came under the radical wing of the publisher Joseph Johnson and the Reverend Richard Price at the Unitarian Chapel on Newington Green.

    The chapel today, which proclaims itself ‘the birthplace of feminism’, is still “remarkable, full of interesting people,” says Rowlatt – and it boasts perhaps the country’s only atheist minister. Rowlatt is a strong believer in honouring “these pockets of radical history, in a time when London is being increasingly scooped out and turned into luxury flats.”

    What would Mary think of the area today, I ask. Rowlatt looks concerned and replies after some thought: “I think she’d be pretty appalled.”

    “Wollstonecraft came from inequality and dragged herself up, so she really cared about the 99 per cent… it was the fundamental injustice that made her angry.” She eagerly adds though, that Wollstonecraft was “an inveterate optimist – it was in her DNA – she believed in the perfectibility of mankind.” And womankind, certainly.

    Rowlatt was surprised to find that her attitude to motherhood and feminism changed significantly during the trip. “I started off from a position of outrage and ended up realising how bloody lucky I am,” and has come to believe that even a “toehold on both worlds” – of work and motherhood – is worth celebrating. I ask her if she thinks the same is true for men. “Don’t compare men to women,” she says, “compare them to their dads.” Like Wollstonecraft, Rowlatt’s belief in the perfectibility of mankind seems to prevail.

    Nevertheless, Rowlatt is outraged that Wollstonecraft’s legacy as a pioneering feminist and influential author “hasn’t been commemorated in the way she deserves”, and is involved in the Mary on the Green campaign, which calls for a memorial statue of Wollstonecraft on Newington Green. Rowlatt continues to be in awe of the spirit that led Wollstonecraft to embark on her juggernaut of a journey, and her own was in large part a eulogy.

    In Search of Mary: The Mother of All Journeys is published by Alma Books. RRP: £12.99. ISBN: 9781846883781.

    Mary Wollstonecraft cover