Caroline Ashurst Stansfeld (English: /ˈstænsfiːld/; 28 January 1816 – 29 March 1885) was a member of an important family of radical activists in mid-nineteenth-century England who supported causes ranging from women's suffrage to Italian unification. In 1844, she married[1]Sir James Stansfeld (1820–1898), the future MP for Halifax and preeminent political advocate for the movement to repeal the Contagious Diseases Acts.[2] She maintained a close friendship with Italian nationalist Giuseppe Mazzini, who wrote to her frequently and 1,500 of his letters to the family have been published in E.F. Richards’ collection: Letters to an English Family.[3]
The daughters were brought up in Muswell Hill, London, in a community of 19th-century reformers and free thinkers who advocated for more equality in society including anti-slavery. Her father gave his daughters freedom "considered shocking" for those times.[4]
Caroline and James Stansfeld (1820–1898) were married in Finsbury at the South Place Chapel, on 27 July 1844, by William Johnson Fox. Although trained as a lawyer, Stansfeld worked as a brewer, owning the Swan Brewery.[4] In 1859 Stansfeld entered Parliament, when he advocated for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts.[4]
On 19 April 1852, the couple had a son, Joseph James Stansfeld, named after Giuseppe Mazzini.[4] Mazzini considered him a godson, sending letters and books from abroad.[5]
Activism
Like her sisters and her husband, Caroline Stansfeld was active in the feminist movement from its beginnings in the 1840s. She sat on the Whittington Club's executive council for equal adult education, worked to reform prostitution laws through the Associate Institution, worked to repeal the Contagious Diseases Act, and worked closely with radical Clementia Taylor. She was actively involved in the London Society for Women's Suffrage between 1867 and 1883. She supported abolitionism and the side of the Union in the US Civil War.[4]
Stansfeld had a close relationship with Giuseppe Mazzini, the Italian revolutionary and republican. She considered him another brother almost from the time he met the Ashurst in 1844.[6] She and her husband were members and she was a fundraiser of the Society of the Friends of Italy, supporting the unification of Italy.[4] Mazzini "referred to Caroline as ‘his ministering angel’: she assisted him in a variety of capacities, helping not only with his personal and domestic affairs but aiding him with his literary work, as well as becoming involved in more dangerous activities, such as securing money and documents for Italian revolutionaries and providing secret places of refuge for them." In 1864, James Stansfeld was implicated in a plot to assassinate Napoleon III and had to leave his government post.[4]
Stanfeld's physical and mental health declined starting in 1881. She died on 29 March 1885 of a cerebral haemorrhage in her home, Stoke Lodge, Hyde Park Gate, London.[4] She is buried at St. Denys Church in Rotherfield.
References
^Gleadle, Kathryn. "Caroline Stansfeld". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
^On Stansfeld's important political career see J.L. Hammond and Barbara Hammond, James Stansfeld: A Victorian Champion of Sex Equality (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1932).
^E. F. Richards. Mazzini's Letters to an English Family., 3 vols. New York: John Lane, 1920–22.
^ abcdefghijKathryn Gleadle (2004). "Caroline Ashurst Stansfeld". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
^For example, see E. F. Richards, ed., Mazzini's Letters to an English Family 1861–1872 vol III (London: John Lane, 1922), 34, 39, 141, 195, 211.
^Allison Scardino Belzer, “Three Generations of Unconventional Family Values: A Case Study of the Ashursts” Journal of Victorian Culture 20.1 (March 2015), 2.
^Elizabeth Crawford, ed., The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide, 1866–1928 (London: UCL Press, 1999), 652.
^Eugene Oswald, Reminiscences of a Busy Life (London: Alexander Moring, 1911), 347.