Edith Pope (16431733)

Timeline

  • Baptism of Edith Turner

    Edith Turner is born at Worsbrough, near Barnsley, 50 miles south of York, the daughter of Thomasine (Newton) Turner and William Turner. Edith, the fourteenth of at least sixteen children, is baptised in the Anglican faith at Worsboough near Barnsley. The family has for several generations "carefully trodden the borderline between Catholicism and protestantism, those of the former faith depending on those prepared—publicly at least—to profess the latter" (Howard Erskine-Hill, 'Pope, Alexander (1688–1744)', ODNB, 2004).

  • Move to Kexborough

    Around 1645 the Turner family moved to Birthwaite Hall, Kexborough, 4 miles north of Barnsley.

  • Father dies

  • Mother dies

  • Marriage to Alexander Pope, senior

    No marriage date is known, but it would have been after Edith was named as a beneficiary in a will with her maiden name.

  • Birth of son Alexander Pope

    Likely at no. 2 Plough Court just off Lombard Street in the City of London, at the age of forty-four Edith gives birth to her only child, Alexander Pope.

  • Move to Hammersmith

    Alexander senior moves his family from Plough Court to the village of Hammersmith, about five miles west of the center of London. They likely remain there until moving to Binfield.

  • Move to Binfield, in Windsor Forest

    Husband Alexander Pope Senior had acquired the house at Binfield, Berkshire, in 1698. He moves his family there around 1700.

  • Move to Chiswick

    The Pope family is obliged to take their leave of Windsor Forest and move to Chiswick, in anticipation of "An Act for appointing Commissioners to inquire of the estates of certain traitors, and of Popish recusants, and of estates given to superstitious uses, in order to raise money out of them severally for the use of the public." Royal assent to the Commissioners Bill is given on 26 June.

  • Death of husband Alexander

    Alexander Pope senior dies, aged seventy-five.

  • Move to Twickenham

    The success of the Iliad subscription sales allows son Alexander Pope to move to Twickenham, a village to the west of London, where he leases cottages on a small plot of land on the banks of the Thames. Edith accompanies him and remains at Twickenham for the remaining years of her life.

  • Death of Edith Pope

    Three days after his mother's death, Alexander Pope writes to his friend Jonathan Richardson:

    upon her countenance such an expression of Tranquillity, nay almost of pleasure, that far from horrid, it is even amiable to behold it. It wou'd afford the finest Image of a Saint expir'd, that ever Painting drew; and it wou'd be the greatest obligation which even That obliging Art could ever bestow on a friend if you cou'd come and sketch it for me. ... I will defer her interment till tomorrow night.

    Edith Pope is buried in the churchyard of St. Mary's, Twickenham, likely in the evening as was common for Catholic burials in Protestant grounds.