Johnston[e] Augusta 59
Herbert Street North Shoreditch
Actress, music and Comedy teacher and writer,
Someone I would have liked to have met!
Someone I would have liked to have met!
Mary Ann Augusta Johnstone was born in Marylebone in 1818. Her parents
had married at St Paul Covent Garden in 1809.
Her father Thomas Oswald Johnstone was in trade at the time of her
baptism. In November 1824 when he was
made bankrupt he was in business as a dealer in music and musical instrument
dealer at Great Queen Street Lincolns Inn Fields . In her later article on Debt Augusta clearly speaks from experience, and who knows what the parents and their 5 year old daughter went through in the following years. . It appears that her father died by 1851. In the 1851 census Augusta was a teacher of
Music and Comedy, living with her widowed mother who was totally dependent on her for
support.
In 1857 she published
A Woman’s Preachings for woman’s practice, essays addressed to women on
a range of topics, which were apparently first published in a weekly magazine
from 1854. http://dbooks.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/books/PDFs/600077362.pdf The
first essay, addressed to men, is graphic in its descriptions of the violence which women can suffer from their husbands in marriage. On page 80, in the chapter on Art and Artistes she describes the drudgery a middle ranking
actress as well as discussing the fate of young ballet dancers who are at risk of becoming prostitutes . On page 131, in the article on Debt she advises single women on the dangers of getting into debt. The article on
Suspicion is particularly interesting on the double standards which might exist in the Victorian marriage. She herself did not marry, but one wonders if it was her parents'or friends' relationship which informed her strong opinions. She suggests that it is foolish to marry a rake expecting that he will be reformed by marriage. On Page 150 she says .’it is a terrible thing to find you
share his affections(?)[sic] with your own house maid …[or that] a discarded
mistress [comes to your home asking for help] In 1859 she
published A few out of thousands their sayings and doings and in 1864 A
message from Whitechapel which I have not seen, but which are in the British Library.
1861 census Civil
Parish: Shoreditch St Leonard Ecclesiastical parish Holy Trinity County/Island: Middlesex Country: England
Registration district: Shoreditch Sub-registration district: Hoxton New Town
ED, institution, or vessel: 7 Household schedule number: 61 Piece: 236 Folio:
145 Page Number: 9