Richard Cobbold

Richard Cobbold
Born1797
Ipswich
Died(1877-01-05)5 January 1877
LanguageEnglish
NationalityBritish
Alma materCaius College, Cambridge
Period1827-1858
GenreNovels

Richard Cobbold (1797 – 5 January 1877) was a British writer.

Life

Richard Cobbold was born in 1797 in the Suffolk town of Ipswich, to John (1746–1835) and the poet and writer Elizabeth (née Knipe) Cobbold (1764–1824). The Cobbolds were a large and affluent family who made their money from the brewing industry.[1]

Educated at Caius College, Cambridge,[2] Cobbold entered the church, starting at St Mary-le-Tower in Ipswich before moving to Wortham in 1825 with his wife and three sons. He remained there until his death on 5 January 1877.[3]

Cobbold is best known as the author of the History of Margaret Catchpole, a novel based on the romantic adventures of a woman living in the neighbourhood of Ipswich, in whom Cobbold's father had taken a kindly interest. For the copyright of this book he is said to have received £1,000. However Cobbold did not make much money by his other literary ventures, which were mostly undertaken for charitable purposes. Thus his account of Mary Ann Wellington brought in no less than £600, much of it in small gifts, for the subject of the book, who was afterwards placed in an almshouse by Cobbold's exertions.[3]

Family

In 1822, he married the only daughter of Jeptha Waller, by whom he had three sons.[3] One of the sons, Edward Augustus (born 1825), became vicar of the neighbouring parish of Yaxley, and another Thomas Spencer, a leading parasitologist.[4]

Legacy

During his time at Wortham, more significantly, he recorded the daily lives of his various parishioners, both in words and pictures. His four volumes eventually found a home at the Suffolk Record Office, and have become an invaluable source of information about everyday life in the countryside at that time. In 1977 a book entitled The Biography of a Victorian Village was published, in which Ronald Fletcher presents Richard Cobbold's account of 1860s Wortham.

Work

Cobbold achieved considerable success with his popular historical novels which include:

  • The History Of Margaret Catchpole: A Suffolk Girl (1845)
  • Mary Anne Wellington: The Soldier's Daughter, Wife and Widow (1846)
  • Zenon The Martyr: A Record of the Piety, Patience and Persecution of the Early Christian Nobles (1847)
  • Freston Tower: A Tale of the Times of Cardinal Wolsey (1850)
  • The Young Man's Home (1848)
  • JH Stegall, a Real History of a Suffolk Man (1851)
  • The Biography Of A Victorian Village – Wortham (1860)
  • Cobbold's Wortham - The Portrait of a Victorian Village (2019) Edited by Sue Heaser - Publication of Cobbold's watercolours and notes of Wortham 1860.

Adaptations

  • The History Of Margaret Catchpole: A Suffolk Girl became the 1887 play An English Lass by Alfred Dampier and C.H. Krieger, which formed the basis for the film The Romantic Story of Margaret Catchpole (1912)

References

Wikisource has original works by or about:
Richard Cobbold
  1. ^ "Cobbold Family Tree". Cobbold Family History Trust. Retrieved 10 January 2009
  2. ^ "Cobbold, Richard (CBLT814R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ a b c Watkins 1887.
  4. ^ Parish, W.D. List of Carthusians, 1800–1879 p.51
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Watkins, Morgan George (1887). "Cobbold, Richard". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 146–147.

External links

  • Works by Richard Cobbold at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Richard Cobbold at Internet Archive
  • Richard Cobbold: The Character of Woman[permanent dead link], London 1848, PDF
  • "Archival material relating to Richard Cobbold". UK National Archives. Edit this at Wikidata
  • v
  • t
  • e

Thomas Cobbold
brewer
(1680–1752)
Mary Woodthorpe
(died 1758)
Thomas Cobbold
(1708–1767)
Sarah Cobbold
(1717–1777)
Isabella Garrett
(died 1777)
William Cobbold
(1747–1795)
Elizabeth Wilkinson
(1753–1790)
John Cobbold
(1746–1835)
Elizabeth Knipe
novelist and poet
(1765–1824)
Mary Anne Trapnell
(1781–1810)
Thomas Cobbold
(1772–1835)
Harriet Temple Chevallier
(1775–1851)
John Wilkinson Cobbold
(1774–1860)
Richard Cobbold
novelist and priest
(1797–1877)
Mary Anne Waller
(1801–1876)
Mary Anne Cobbold
(1806–1868)
Francis Cobbold
priest
(1803–1844)
John Chevallier Cobbold
brewer, railway developer and politician
(1797–1882)
Lucy Patteson
(1800–1879)
Thomas Spencer Cobbold
scientist
(1828–1886)
Edward Augustus Cobbold
priest
(1825–1900)
Mathilda Caroline Smith
(1826–1923)
Charles Chevallier
priest and canon
(1823–1885)
Isobella Frances Cobbold
(1834–1917)
John Patteson Cobbold
politician
(1831–1875)
Adela Harriette Dupuis
(1837–1917)
Nathanael Fromanteel Cobbold
(1839–1886)
Caroline Ellen Boutell
(1843–1882)
William Nevill "Nuts" Cobbold
footballer
(1863–1922)
Maj. Ernest St George Cobbold
(1840–1895)
Helen Emma Cazenove
(1842–1917)
Thomas Clement Cobbold
diplomat
(1833–1883)
Felix Thornley Cobbold
barrister and politician
(1841–1909)
John Barrington Chevallier
(1857–1940)
Isabel Amy Cobbold
(1869–1931)
John Dupuis Cobbold
(1861–1929)
Lady Evelyn Murray
later Zainab Cobbold
(1867–1963)
Ralph Patteson Cobbold
British Army soldier and writer
(1869–1965)
Clement John Cobbold
(1882–1961)
Stella Willoughby Cameron
(1882–1918)
Lady Blanche Katharine Cavendish
(1898–1987)
John Murray Cobbold
(1897–1944)
Pamela Cobbold
(1900–1932)
Charles Jocelyn Hambro
merchant banker and intelligence officer
(1897–1963)
Lady Margaret Hermione Lytton
(1905–2004)
Cameron Fromanteel Cobbold,
1st Baron Cobbold
(1904–1987)
John Cavendish Cobbold
businessman
(1927–1983)
Patrick Mark Cobbold
businessman
(1934–1994)
Charles Eric "Charlie" Hambro,
Baron Hambro
(1930–2002)
David Antony Lytton Cobbold,
2nd Baron Cobbold
(1937–2022)
Henry Fromanteel Lytton Cobbold,
3rd Baron Cobbold
(born 1962)
Notes
  • Cobbold Family History Trust
Family tree of the Cobbold family
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