Presentation given at the Maritime Masculinities 1815 - 1940 Conference, University of Oxford, December 2016, https://maritimemasculinities.wordpress.com/
Smoking Chimneys and Fallen Women - The several reinventions of Sir Henry Hart
1. Smoking Chimneys & Fallen Women
The several reinventions of Sir Henry Hart.
By
Heather Noel-Smith
and
Lorna M. Campbell
Maritime Masculinities 1815 – 1940, Oxford, December 2016
17. “He is a great man, and on many occasions
appears to forget he was a seaman. He is a bit with
the dignity of the Corps Diplomatique.”
Memoirs of the life of Vice-Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson by Thomas Joseph Pettigrew
18. Queen Victoria in her Coronation Robes after Franz
Xaver Winterhaler.
Public Domain image.
19. “At six o ‘clock the Prince de Joinville dined with
the President in a large party, composed of the
Corps Diplomatique, the members of the Cabinet,
now in this city, Lord Prudhoe, brother ofthe
Duke of Northumberland, and Sir Henry Hart,
both of the Royal Navy, and many distinguished
officers of our own Army and Navy.”
New York Tribune, 19 July 1841.
24. “….after briefly referring to the various means by
which the Mission is aiming to elevate the
standards of morals of good character stated that,
while the managers attached great importance to
every measure calculated to prevent virtuous
females from being ensnared and corrupted, they
could not overlook the necessity of strenuous
exertions to rescue from present misery and
everlasting ruin those who were living in open
sin.”
The Female’s Advocate, under the superintendence of the committee of the London Female Mission,
Vol. 1, ( L and G Seeley, Fleet Street, 1838)