British writer, teacher, educational reformer and painter
Matilda Sharpe (4 April 1830 – 30 April 1916)[1] was a British writer, teacher, educational reformer and painter. She founded what is now Channing School.
Life
She was the daughter of Sarah Sharpe, an artist, and Samuel Sharpe who was a banker and an Egyptologist. Her parents were Unitarian, rich and cousins.[2]
She was a talented artist, exhibiting at the Royal Academy, but her vocation was teaching. During the 1870s she volunteered her time and money to several schools. She was an inspiring teacher and the leading New South Wales politician, William Holman, attributed his success to her teaching.[2]
She died at her home in Highgate in 1915. Several of her portraits are in the National Portrait Gallery, London.[4]
Selected publications
Old favourites from the elder poets, with a few newer friends. A selection by M. Sharpe. Williams and Norgate, London, 1881. Second revised edition, Methuen, 1912. An anthology of nine women poets, particularly Anna Laetitia Barbauld.
Never forget: A collection of precepts. Griffith & Farran, London, 1890.
The journey to paradise, or, flight of the soul to its maker. A heavenly day dream set down by Matilda Sharpe. Christian Life Office, London, 1899.