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The Beloved Wife: Louisa Blanche Foljambe
The finely sculpted effigy of
Louisa Blanche Foljambe with her baby son rests on a tomb chest
in the north-west corner of St Mary’s Church, Tickhill. Around
the sides of the tomb chest the many heraldic shields show
Louisa’s ancestry and that of her husband, Cecil George Savile
Foljambe, who became Earl of Liverpool in 1905. A new
publication by the Revd Donald Thorpe, The Beloved Wife:
Louisa Blanche Foljambe 1842-1871 not only tells the story
of who designed the tomb chest and how it came to be moved to St
Mary’s in 1908, but it also provides biographies of Louisa and
her family drawing on unpublished journals and other sources.
Painstaking research has decoded
the heraldic shields. All sixteen of Louisa’s
great-great-grandparents had coats of arms and both Louisa and
her husband could trace their descent from John of Gaunt. An
aristocratic background, however, was no protection from the
terrible toll of infant mortality and the perils of childbirth
in Victorian times. Such was Cecil’s grief at the loss of his
wife, six weeks after their day-old second son Frederick died,
that he commemorated Louisa in a total of at least 62 memorials
in 38 churches. Louisa and Cecil’s surviving child, Arthur
William De Brito Savile Foljambe, who succeeded to the Earldom
in 1907, became the first Governor-General of New Zealand ten
years later.
This publication condenses a
great deal of research about the tomb chest in a beautifully
illustrated and presented work. Copies price £5 are on sale at
KSM Dry Cleaners. Profits go to St Mary’s Heritage Appeal, with
over £100 raised since the publication in August.
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