Fanny Kemble, 🇬🇧 Abolitionist, Actress and Author #BlackHandSide
Fanny Kemble - Abolitionist

Fanny Kemble, 🇬🇧 Abolitionist, Actress and Author #BlackHandSide

Fanny Kemble, 🇬🇧 Abolitionist, Actress and Author #BlackHandSide

Fanny Kemble, actress, abolitionist, author of plantation life book

Frances “Fanny” Kemble was born on November 26th in 1809. She was a White British actress, author, and abolitionist.

Frances Anne Kemble was a member of the famous Kemble theatrical family, the oldest daughter of actor Charles Kemble and his actress wife Maria Theresa De Camp, and the niece of noted tragedienne Sarah Siddons. Fanny was born in London and educated chiefly in France.

Fanny Kemble first appeared on the stage as Juliet at Covent Garden on October 26, 1829. In 1832, she accompanied her father on a theatrical tour of the U.S. For two seasons, Kemble and the company toured the United States, playing to wildly enthusiastic audiences.

Kemble published a record of her two-year theatrical tour, “Journal of a Residence in America” (1835). It was an incisive and genuinely good-humored account, but such publications by foreigners were the rage then and thin-skinned critics made her the target of journalistic wrath.

In that same year, she met one of her most ardent admirers, Pierce Butler, American heir of one of the largest slaveholders in Georgia. His grandfather was Major Pierce Butler, a Revolutionary War veteran, a U.S. senator from South Carolina, and a founding father who wrote the Constitution's fugitive slave clause.

Major Butler owned 638 slaves and was one of the wealthiest men in the United States. He also owned a mansion in Philadelphia and a country home near the city. His grandson was the heir to all this wealth.

Kemble was happy to retire in 1834 to become the wife of Butler. In spite of her success, she hated what she thought of as the artificiality of acting.

When the couple married, he was not a slaveholder, but by the time their two daughters, Sarah and Frances, were born, Pierce Butler had inherited his grandfather's property.

In March of 1836, Pierce and his brother John inherited two sea-island plantations, one on St. Simon's Island, where sea-island cotton was grown, and one on Butler Island, where rice was grown.

Kemble wanted to see the plantation firsthand and begged Butler to take her with him. He refused on his first trip, but In December of 1838, Pierce, Fanny, their two children Sarah and Frances, and their Irish nurse Margery O'Brien set out for Butler Island.

Nothing in Kemble’s life had prepared her for this place. Fanny was shocked by the conditions of slaves and their treatment. She tried to better their conditions and complained to her husband about slavery.

The marriage was troubled nearly from the start. Fanny believed that Pierce would continue in his devotion and Pierce believed that Fanny would curb her independent nature and allow him to rule over her. Their differences over slavery added to the friction.

When she left his plantations in the spring of 1839, debates about slavery and marital tensions continued.

Unable to live with slavery, she withdrew, first visiting England in 1841 and breaking formally with her husband in 1846. The couple was divorced in 1849, with Pierce keeping custody of the two daughters until they came of age.

For a year, she returned to the British stage and in 1847, moved to Italy, where she wrote “A Year of Consolation” (1848).

Kemble returned to the United States, making a career of giving public readings from Shakespeare. This innovation brought her enthusiastic applause and a more than decent income. Fanny was reunited with each of her girls when they turned 21.

Kemble recorded her experiences in letters, which she later compiled and published. Kemble and her daughter Sarah were pro-North in the Civil War; Butler and daughter Frances were pro-South.

In early 1861, Butler and daughter Frances went to Georgia. Upon their return to Philadelphia in August, he was arrested for treason and released in September.

In 1863, in a very successful attempt to influence British public opinion against the Confederate states, Kemble published an account of her plantation experience, “Journal of a Residence on a Georgia Plantation.”

It is the closest, most detailed look at plantation slavery ever recorded by a white northern abolitionist.

Following the war, Butler returned to Butler Island with his daughter Frances.

He found a number of former slaves living there and arranged that they would work for him as sharecroppers. Management of the plantation was difficult, and though Frances returned to Philadelphia, Pierce remained on the island despite the dangers of the disease. He contracted malaria and died in August 1867.

Following Pierce's death, Kemble returned to Butler Island to continue organizing the plantation, and then she moved to Philadelphia. Throughout her life, Kemble continued to perform dramatic readings, travel, and publish her journals.

She published several later volumes of an autobiography, a literary criticism, and a novel, “Far Away and Long Ago” (1889).

Fanny Kemble died peacefully in London on January 15, 1893.

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