The Criminal Conversation of Mrs Norton Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Criminal Conversation of Mrs Norton Book

Caroline Norton: beauty and wit poet pamphleteer and blue stocking. Married to a boorish minor aristocrat at 19 who accused her for his own political ends of an affair 'Criminal Conversation' with Lord Melbourne which ended in the 'Trial of the Century'. Pilloried by society cut off and bankrupted by her family she went on to be the most important figure in establishing womens' rights in marriage. This is the startling story of how one woman changed marriage and revolutionised women's rights. At the beginning of the nineteenth century a wife was a chattel of her husband: her children were not her own and all her money and belongings automatically became his when they married. Before 1857 an Act of Parliament was the only way to get a divorce. Caroline Sheridan was a beautiful clever and opinionated young woman who was manoeuvred into marrying George Norton when she was nineteen. Nearly ten years older he was a dull miserly violent and controlling barrister but she would never be the traditional mousey Victorian wife. By her early twenties and despite her husband's protestations Caroline had become a respected poet and song-writer clever mimic and outrageous flirt. Her beauty and wit attracted many male admirers including the Prime Minister Lord Melbourne. When Caroline refused to promote her husband to Melbourne for a stipend job in government he publically accused her and Queen Victoria's first Prime Minister of a 'criminal conversation' (adultery) with his wife which led to an infamous trial at Westminster Hall in 1836 'the scandal of the century'. Charles Dickens a newspaper reporter at the trial would later fictionalize the event as 'Bardell v Pickwick' in in "The Pickwick Papers." After a trial lasting twelve hours the jury's not guilty verdict was immediate and unanimous. Norton was a laughing-stock: angry and humiliated he threw Caroline out and refused to let her see their three sons He seized her manuscripts and letters and her clothes and jewels. For the next thirty years Caroline Norton campaigned for women and battled male-dominated Victorian society helping to write the Infant and Child Custody Act (1839) the Matrimonial Causes (Divorce) Act (1857) and the Married Women's Property Act (1870) which gave women a separate legal identity for the first time. Diane Atkinson has spent two years researching Caroline Norton's story afresh and sheds new and intriguing light on Caroline's life and her relationship with Melbourne and the trial verdict.Read More

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  • TheBookPeople

    Written by the acclaimed historian Diane Atkinson, The Criminal Conversation of Mrs Norton is the sensational true story of Caroline Norton - a beautiful and clever young woman who fought for the rights of women everywhere. Maneuvered into marriage at just 19, ten years later Caroline's husband George Norton was a dull, violent and controlling man and when Caroline stood up for herself and refused to be the wife he wanted, he accused her of adultery. Soon, Caroline was exonerated and cut off from her children by her vindictive husband. This is when she began to campaign to get women a separate legal identity for the first time. Caroline helped write the Infant Custody Act and also influenced the Matrimonial Causes (Divorce) Act and the Married Women's Property Act in the nineteenth century. This beautiful hardback is a fascinating read for anyone interested in history and politics.

  • Waterstones

    Westminster, London, 22 June 1836. It is a fine, fresh morning that will become hot as the day progresses. Crowds are gathering at the Court of Common Pleas. On trial is Caroline Sheridan, a beautiful and clever young woman who had been manoeuvred in

  • 1848093012
  • 9781848093010
  • Dr Diane Atkinson
  • 19 July 2012
  • Preface Publishing
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 496
  • 1st Edition
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