Record

Ref NoMS 466/1/1/2/2
Finding NumberMS 466/69-71
TitlePapers relating to Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury and Dame Henrietta Barnett
LevelSub Series
Date1897 - 1936
DescriptionThis section contains letters and papers relating to the friendship between Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury and the social reformer Dame Henrietta Barnett (1851-1936).

The letters featured here provide an insight into the development of Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury's relationship with Henrietta Barnett which began in the late 1890s when Barnett contacted Taylor Cadbury about visiting Bournville. Henrietta Barnett's letters reveal her admiration for Bournville and particularly for Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury whose active life devoted to philanthropic work and social reform formed a source of inspiration for Barnett. The influence of Bournville on both Henrietta and Samuel Barnett is also evident in these letters which relate to the development of similar housing projects and Henrietta Barnett's work in the Hampstead Garden Suburb during the early twentieth century.
Extent24
FormatItems
Related MaterialInformation about Henrietta and Samuel Barnett taken from Seth Koven, 'Barnett, Dame Henrietta Octavia Weston (1851-1936)' Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30610] accessed 26th August 2009 and Seth Koven, 'Barnett, Samuel, Augustus (1844-1913)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30612] accessed 26th August 2009.
Access StatusOpen
AdminHistoryBorn in Surrey, Henrietta Barnett, (nee Rowland, 1851-1936) was educated in Dover before working with the philanthropist and housing reformer Octavia Hill in Marylebone. It was through her work with Hill that Rowland met Samuel Augustus Barnett (1844-1913) who became her husband in 1873 and was later appointed Canon and Subdean of Westminster. Koven describes the Barnetts' 'remarkable collaboration as social reformers', suggesting that like Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury and her husband George Cadbury, Henrietta was 'her husband's equal partner in all their celebrated initiatives'. Barnett's philanthropic endeavours reflected Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury's work in Bournville, particularly through her establishment of the Children's Country Holiday Fund in 1884. In the same year Henrietta and Samuel Barnett established the University Settlement Toynbee Hall and in 1903 Henrietta founded the Hampstead Garden Suburb, a housing and community project which was influenced by Bournville. A published writer, Henrietta Barnett also established educational institutions in Hampstead during the early twentieth century and was created Dame of the British Empire in 1924.
LanguageEnglish
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