Thomas and Elizabeth Greenhow lived in Newcastle's fashionable Old Eldon Square.[9] The couple had several children; Frances and at least two boys. Henry Martineau Greenhow (1829–1912) followed his father into medicine. He joined the Indian Medical Service and spent his career in British India, rising to surgeon major. His garrison withstood the Siege of Lucknow, a key part of the Indian Rebellion of 1857.[10] Another brother, William Thomas Greenhow (1831–1921) became a judge.[11][12] The siblings' first cousin Edward Headlam Greenhow was a physician-academic, who made his mark in epidemiology and public health.[13]
Frances was educated at her aunt Rachel Martineau's school and remained close to Rachel's sister Harriet in adulthood. The Unitarian ethos of liberalism and service to society stayed with her throughout her life.[4]
In 1847 Frances married Francis Lupton (1813–1884), a member of a prosperous and politically active cloth manufacturing family in Leeds. In addition to his business interests, he was one of the founders of the Yorkshire College of Science in 1874,[14] which became part of the federal Victoria University, and from 1904 the University of Leeds. The Luptons were Unitarians who worshipped at Mill Hill Chapel on Leeds City Square, where a stained glass window commemorates them.[15]
Frances married into a family of activists. Her husband's younger brother, Joseph Lupton, was president[16]
and later vice-president[17] of Manchester New College, the training college for ministers where Frances's uncle taught. He was an anti-slavery campaigner and a Liberal who sat on the executive of the National Reform Union. He sat on the committee for the National Society for Women's Suffrage.[18] The brothers' cousin Jane married the minister at Mill Hill, Charles Wicksteed, an educational reformer. He co-founded the Leeds Education Society,[19] a precursor to the National Education League.
Francis and Frances lived just outside the rapidly industrialising city at Potternewton Hall,[20] later moving to Beechwood, a Georgiancountry house in Roundhay.[21] Francis had farms at Beechwood and worked as a director of the family wool manufacturing firm until he died suddenly at the age of 70 in 1884.[22]
The Luptons had five sons, Francis Martineau, Arthur, Herbert (who died young), Charles, and Hugh.[1] When her brother's wife died, she took in their daughter Mabel Greenhow to raise alongside her own children; Mabel grew up to write as Mrs Murray Hickson. Her four surviving sons contributed to the civic life of Leeds; two became Lord Mayor of Leeds.[23][24] Through Olive Middleton (1881–1936), the eldest child of her eldest child Francis Martineau (1848–1921), Frances Lupton is the great-great-great-grandmother of Catherine, Princess of Wales.[25][26]
Lupton's aunt Harriet Martineau paid a visit to the United States in 1834, one of her areas of interest was the emerging girls' schools. In Society in America (1837), the sociologist criticised the state of female education:
"The intellect of women is confined by an unjustifiable restriction of ... education ... As women have none of the objects in life for which an enlarged education is considered requisite, the education is not given ... The choice is to either be ill-educated, passive, and subservient, or well-educated, vigorous, and free only upon sufferance."[28]
In 1871 Lupton became Honorary Secretary to the Ladies' Honorary Council of the Yorkshire Board of Education, which was just six years old. She was "the powerful driving force of the organization" and also that of the Leeds Ladies' Educational Association. One of her first successes was setting up a students' library. Soon, the committees had arranged to superintend the first Cambridge Local Examination for women in Leeds.[4][26]
The most pressing need was for better all-round education for girls, equivalent to what boys received at traditional grammar schools. Established interests prevented the use of existing charitable funds, despite the passage of the Endowed Schools Act 1869, so Lupton led a meeting between the Leeds Association and the Ladies Council to create a new way forward – a joint-stock company. Her business acumen led to the establishment of Leeds Girls' High School in 1876.[4][26]
Lupton and the Ladies Council also saw the need for the dissemination of practical information on traditionally female subjects such as health and nursing. They launched a cookery school in 1874, having requested but not received help from civil servant Sir Henry Cole. In the following decade, the Yorkshire Training School of Cookery developed teacher training courses at the request of the school boards – eventually this formed a component of Leeds Metropolitan University.[4][26]
By 1872, Lupton represented NECPHEW's Leeds Ladies' Educational Association on the North of England Council for Promoting the Higher Education of Women (NECPHEW). As a council member, she also belonged to the Education for Girls Committee of the Royal Society of Arts which, from 1871, had aligned itself with the aims of NECPHEW.[30][31][32] Lupton, Mrs Henry Currer Briggs and Mrs F.W. Kitson established the Leeds branch of the Association for the Care and Protection of Friendless Girls in 1885 which was also supported by members of her family.[33]
Death
Lupton died at home at Beechwood on 9 March 1892 and is buried at St John's Church in Roundhay.[1][34]
^ ab"Newcastle Infirmary Time Line 1801–1849". Newcastle University. Archived from the original on 12 October 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2013. 1832: Thomas Greenhow appointed honorary surgeon to the Infirmary. He had already been surgeon to the lying-in hospital, and in 1822 had established the Eye Infirmary with John Fife.
^Bettany, G. T. (2004). "Fife, Sir John (1795–1871), surgeon and politician". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 19 July 2013. He [Fife] specialized in diseases of the eye, founding in 1822, with T. M. Greenhow, a charity which became the Newcastle Eye Infirmary.
^"Newcastle Infirmary Time Line 1850–1888". Newcastle University. Archived from the original on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 19 July 2013. 1850: Mr Greenhow, as spokesman for the honorary medical staff, points out that again the Infirmary is inadequate for the needs of the area, which had tripled in population in the last 100 years. The annual report draws the attention of the governors and public to the Infirmaries shortcomings. 1851: Greenhow and Gibb visit hospitals in London and elsewhere to gain insight in modern hospital design, and report back to the committee. On March 13th John Dobson, the famous architect, laid his plans for a new wing and redevelopment of the Infirmary before the committee, and they were agreed on April 3rd. 1855: The Dobson Wing opened, costing £10 500.
^Tayler, Kenneth S. (1959). "An Architect's Headache". The History of Essex Hal. Lindsey Press. Archived from the original on 1 May 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2013. the meeting-hall on the ground floor, to be named the Martineau Hall, and to be used for meetings of the Council of the General Assembly and similar gatherings, but also to be registered as a place of worship and used for occasional religious services
^Peterson, Linda H. (21 December 2006). Autobiography – Harriet Martineau. Broadview Press 2007. ISBN9781460403143. Retrieved 14 June 2013. Harriet visited Birmingham to see her mother, Elizabeth, in 1846. At that time, Harriet's brother, Robert, was Mayor of Birmingham.
^Chapple, J. (1997). Elizabeth Gaskell: The Early Years. Manchester University Press. p. 355. ISBN0719025508. Retrieved 30 July 2019. ... Elizabeth (Lissy) who married a surgeon.... living in the fashionable Eldon Square...
^Entry in Plarr's Lives of the Fellows Online, a biographical register of the Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, written by its librarian Victor Plarr (1863–1929), and hosted by the College [1]
^Cassell, J. (1853). "The Popular Educator, Volume 3". John Cassell. p. 116. Retrieved 13 March 2017. On the 4th May, 1853, the ceremony took place in the large hall of King's College, Somerset House...
^Mair, R. (1896). "Debrett's Illustrated House of Commons, and the Judicial Bench". Dean & son. p. 354. Retrieved 14 March 2018. HIS HONOUR JUDGE GREENHOW. William Thomas Greenhow, son of the late T. M. Greenhow, Esq., M.D., F.R.C.S., of Chapel Allerton, Leeds, and formerly .......His Honour Judge (W.T.) Greenhow....
^Fraser, Derek (1980). A History of Modern Leeds. Manchester University Press. p. 231.
^"Potternewton Hall, Potternewton Lane". Leodis –A Photographic Archive of Leeds. UK: City of Leeds. Retrieved 17 October 2015. By 1860, the Barker family had sub-divided their estate with Potternewton Hall and 13 acres being sold to Francis William Lupton, a "gentleman" whose family had lived at Potternewton Hall since the early 19th century. The Lupton family had been landowners since the 18th century, owning and developing many properties in and around Leeds, including the Newton Hall Estate, which was adjacent to Potternewton Hall...
^Postlethwaite, Diana (Spring 1989). "Mothering and Mesmerism in the Life of Harriet Martineau". Signs. 14 (3). The University of Chicago Press: 583–609. doi:10.1086/494525. JSTOR3174403. S2CID143910920.